a winter’s night dream.

Usually about this time of year I start to dream of summer.  Going to garage sales.  Finding fabulous things for a dollar.  Eating bad hot dogs and delicious baked goods.  Exploring Minneapolis neighborhoods with amazing older homes.

For those of you who don’t already know this, I hold an occasional sale out of my carriage house twice a year, in June and October.  I have been doing this for a long time with my friend Sue, and recently Jeanne has joined in as well.  We stock the sale with a combination of our garage sale finds and upcycled items we have created.  A ‘curated garage sale’ is a good way to describe it.  Or perhaps a poor man’s Junk Bonanza.  You don’t have to pay to get in, and our prices are way lower.

2013 Summer 1

It’s not fancy.  I have so far refused to invest in any sort of improvements or permanent sale fixtures in the carriage house.  Except for the $5 cubby hole unit I bought at a garage sale.

cubbies

I haven’t even invested in tents because my really fabulous neighbor will loan them to me (I am putting this in here in an attempt to sweet talk her into continuing this valuable service because I know she reads my blog.  Thanks nnK, really appreciate the use of the tents!).

In fact, most of the time the carriage house is a hot mess.  Full of projects in progress, paint everywhere, dust coating everything.

photo compliments of beeskneesbungalow.com
photo compliments of beeskneesbungalow.com

 I try to clear away cobwebs and sweep out most of the mess for the sale, but honestly, I’m not sure if anyone even notices.  They are too busy looking at the goods!  And we definitely have the goods!

xmas sale collage 1

But just now, in January, all of that seems so very far away.  As does green grass.  And outdoor picture taking.

IMG_4552I keep telling myself that summer will be here before I know it.  And in the meantime,  I have plenty of time to write my blog and paint furniture.

2013 summer sale 2

my first.

I haven’t been painting with the Miss Mustard Seed milk paint for all that long.  I was determined to live without it because, let’s face it, it is pricey.  Then last summer at the Oronoco Gold Rush, I purchased a sample of Eulalie’s Sky.  Just a tiny sample, mind you.  I thought I would try it out on a picture frame, or some similar small item.  Just to see what all the fuss was about.

Then I came across the most darling little toy cupboard at a garage sale.  I so wish that I had taken a before picture of this for you, because it was in terrible shape.  The door was falling off, it had been painted black which was crackled to show white underneath.  It had giant fluorescent yellow knobs on the drawers.  Worst of all, it was $20.  In garage sale money, this is a lot.  You know about garage sale money, right?  OK, it’s just regular money, but it’s the concept that prices that would seem a total bargain at a shop are outrageous at a garage sale.  I’m pretty sure that Jeanne thought I was nuts when I picked it up to purchase.

I decided this was the perfect candidate for a test of the milk paint.  I sanded the black paint off, mixed up the milk paint and gave it a go.  If I remember correctly, I ended up doing about 4 coats of paint.  I may have definitely added a little too much water.

first cupboardIsn’t it sweet?  Inside you will find my grandmother’s tiny toy tea set, and some vintage toy kitchen utensils.

I was really impressed by how easy it was to distress this paint.  No more heavy duty sanding, this just needed a light touch of hand sanding and gave these results.

first collage

P.S.  I seem to have a penchant for tiny furniture.  I also found this cute little pink cupboard at a garage sale and it works perfectly for housing my collection of washi tape in my craft room.  So, if you see any fab vintage toy furniture at a garage sale … just back off.  It’s mine.

tiny shelves

furniture whisperer.

I know it sounds cliche, but furniture speaks to me.  No, I’m not crazy, I don’t really hear voices in my head.  But I like to get a feel for a piece of furniture before I decide how to paint it.  This one wanted to be indigo.  Like the Pottery Barn catalog I showed you earlier.  This was the intended recipient of my mixology experiment.

It didn’t quite get there.  It’s a bit darker than I imagined, which is totally my fault because I finished with hemp oil and I should have waxed.  I’d even purchased the Miss Mustard Seed wax just for this piece, so why did I reach for the hemp oil?  Was I tired?  Was it that glass of wine I had with dinner?  I don’t know … but it is what it is.

1890 dresser 1

You can see that I got plenty of chipping on this piece.  I also sanded off a lot more paint than I intended.  Blame that on the wine too, although the reality is you can blame it on working at night with inadequate lighting and the impaired vision of someone in my age bracket.  I have found that even with ‘cheaters’ sometimes my vision just doesn’t cut it at night anymore.

This chippy distressed look is exactly what I like, but I know it’s not for everyone.  Hopefully I will find a buyer who loves it too.

1890 dresser ad 2

I think in the right room it would be a masterpiece.  Add some more touches of indigo in some throw pillows or bed linens.  Lovely.

1890 collage

just one.

On the agenda for this weekend, here is the dresser that I want to paint indigo blue.

1890 before

Before anyone blows a gasket about painting wood, or antiques, let me explain the most glaring problem with this piece.  It’s missing one drawer pull.  Just one.  Sigh.  I want to post a public notice that explains to people that missing ‘just one’ handle is a problem.  I’ve purchased countless pieces that are missing just one handle, and the seller always thinks this is minor, it’s ‘just one’.  At first I was optimistic about this guy.  I took a handle off and carried it around in my purse for weeks.  I checked eBay, Etsy, Rochler, etc.  I naively thought I could find a match.  Ha!  Then, I thought that if I could find something very similar, I could buy two and put them on the top drawer and leave the rest.  Ha!  For about 5 minutes I entertained the notion of putting entirely different knobs on just the top drawer … but, I’m pretty sure that would look stupid.  Any way you cut it, the integrity of this piece as an antique is pretty much lost along with ‘just one’ drawer pull.

Another issue with this guy are the little knobs that were added to the top jewelry drawers.  Follow the arrow on my photo:

1890 knobYep, I’m pretty sure those are not original.  They kind of overlap the key hole, and they aren’t screwed into the wood very far because the metal lock mechanism is behind them.  I’m definitely not an expert and I don’t even play one on TV, but I think these small drawers were intended to be opened with the key, not a knob.  Are there any experts reading this?  If so, please enlighten me if I’m wrong.  Either way, I’m taking them off.  Luckily, I have a key!  It didn’t come with the dresser, but I have a stash of old furniture keys and found one that will open all of the locks except ‘just one’ (naturally)!

One last furniture lesson for today.  This piece also has ‘pin and cove’ joinery.  From what I have read online, where all serious scholars do their research, this type of joinery was only done in the U.S., and only for a relatively short period of time around the 1890’s.

pin and cove

So, yes, this dresser is old, but is it an antique?  Here is how Wikipedia defines an antique:

An antique (Latinantiquus; “old”, “ancient”) is an old collectable item. It is collected or desirable because of its age, beauty, rarity, condition, utility, personal emotional connection, and/or other unique features. It is an object that represents a previous era or time period in human society.

It is common practice to define “antique” as applying to objects at least 100 years old.

So, maybe it is, but I think ‘antique’ is in the eye of the beholder.  To me, the missing drawer pull and weird added knobs make this an ideal candidate for paint.  Especially if I can manage to make the paint job look properly aged.  That is what I am hoping to achieve.  Stay tuned.

il est beau, n’est-ce pas.

I told you that I had a plan in mind for this guy, and that it was inspired by my painted books.  As a reminder, here is the before.

tall curvy beforeI went through a ‘black period’ a few years ago.  I painted a lot of black pieces then, including the desk that I am posting from right now.  And then, I was over it.  I did one black desk early last summer only because it was already black and I just touched it up.  Then I did the owl pull dresser using my bizarre spray paint method, and that was it for black last year.

However, while working on the painted books, I decided it was time for another black piece, and here it is.

black 1I painted this with the Miss Mustard Seed milk paint in Typewriter.

typewriter

That is my own vintage typewriter by the way, but I am guessing that Miss Mustard Seed has something similar that inspired the name for this paint color.

Here is how the paint looks once it’s dry, before sanding and adding the hemp oil finish.

black beforeNot great, right?  But after sanding and adding a coat of hemp oil, the black is gorgeous.

black collage

This french beauty is posted on craigslist SOLD.

mixology.

I mentioned I was thinking of painting a dresser with MMS Flow Blue.  But, turns out the color wasn’t quite what I was expecting.

First, let me show you my inspiration.  The cover of the latest Pottery Barn catalog.

blue pottery barnNice, right?  Love those indigo blues.  Obviously there are many different hues of indigo on this cover, but are you like me?  You imagine a particular color in your head, and that’s the one you want.  The dresser I’m painting next is calling out for a rich indigo.  Not too dark, not too light.

I thought Flow Blue was what I wanted, but it’s not.  I have also worked with MMS’s Artissimo.  It might work for this piece, but it’s just a little darker than I want.  So, I thought perhaps a mix of the two might be just right.  I decided an experiment was in order, so I pulled out the paints and did some mixing.

blue mixologyIn this picture you are seeing Flow Blue on the left, Artissimo at the bottom, and a mix of the two at the top.  I find that you don’t really get a good feel for the colors by just adding the water and mixing.  So I pulled out an old piece of wood and painted each color on.  I ended up doing about 5 coats because the wood was very porous and just drank up the paint.

Here is the board with the wet paint.

blues wet

Since adding the hemp oil tends to really deepen the color, once the board was dry I sanded it lightly and added the oil.  Here are my final results.

blue final colorsAfter all of this, now I think perhaps Artissimo was what I wanted all along.  Or perhaps something like a 75/25 mix.  It was fun to play with the colors, and I think I have a better feel for them now.  I’ll probably look at my board in a couple of different lighting situations before I make up my mind what color to chose.  Stay tuned to see how the dresser turns out.

blue collage

grandma’s chair.

You may have noticed this chair in the pics of my front hallway.  It currently resides at the foot of the stairs.

grandmas chair before

It belonged to my grandparents, and in fact there is a seat cover under that Bemis grain sack that my grandmother needle-pointed by hand.

Originally there were six of these chairs.  They were split up when my grandparents moved out of their house in Minneapolis.  My mother took 2 and my aunt took 4.  When I moved away from home nearly 30 years ago, I ended up with one from my mom.  My brother had the other, but that’s a long story, let’s just say it fell off the back of a truck when he was moving … I think that was what he claimed.

Anyway … problem is, this chair has never really been my style, even though I love the fact that it came from grandma’s house.  In fact, I have photographic evidence.

chair vintageThis photo was actually taken before I was born.  That is my mom on the far right.  The blonde girl is my cousin Nancy who is somewhere around 8 years older than me.  And in the foreground, the chair in question.  So you see, it is older than I am!

I had been living with this chair in its original state for about 25 years when I finally decided to paint it.  I’m fairly certain that my family still thinks that it was sacrilegious, but I did it anyway.  However, this was before I discovered MMS milk paint, and since I find it rather putzy to paint chairs with a brush, I spray painted it.  Then I covered the seat in the Bemis sack, but I did retain the needle point cover underneath.

I thought I would like it in the grey, but I have to say, the spray paint grey was never quite right.

Recently, I purchased some MMS milk paint in Flow Blue.  I wasn’t at all sure what the color would look like in person, having never used it before.  I find that looking at the Miss Mustard Seed paint online doesn’t always give you an accurate picture of her colors.  I’m considering Flow Blue for a dresser I want to paint, but first I wanted to paint something smaller to see what it really looked like up close and personal.

First things first, I mixed the paint.  I think this is one of the reasons why I like MMS paint, I like mixing it.  It sort of reminds me of making mud pies as a kid.

Flow Blue paint

I purchased these measuring cups at a garage sale for a dollar.  Why not use something pretty to measure my paint?  So, I used about 1/4 cup of the powder and about 3/4 cup of warm water.  This made plenty for the chair.  As you can see, the color of the powder is no indication of the color of the paint.  I mix my paint in canning jars.  I prefer my paint shaken, not stirred.

I admit, I was a little scared when I saw the paint.  Quite a bit brighter than what I had pictured.

Here it is going on, and then as it dried.

Flow Blue

Oh my gosh!  I just realized, reading this post may be no more interesting than watching paint dry for some people.  If you are one of them, I apologize, please feel free to skip to the end of the post if you haven’t already.

But for those of you interested in milk paint, I’ll tell you that as this dried, I could see I would get a lot of chipping.  I’m sure this is because I painted over a spray painted finish.  I did sand the surface, and the well sanded areas didn’t chip, but the rest did.  Also, I can tell you that yes, it was still a sort of bright, scary blue as shown above.  However, after I sanded it down and added a topcoat of hemp oil, the color toned down a bit.

And here it is.

grandmas chair after

I have to say, it is not quite the color I expected.  I was thinking it would be a bit more of an indigo blue.  Not quite so teal.  You can see that the grey shows through where the new paint flaked off.  It is pretty, but I am not sure now if I will use it on the dresser I intended it for.

For now, grandma’s chair has returned to the bottom of the stairs.

grandmas chair

Those of you with a keen eye for detail will notice that the carpet has been removed from the stairs.  Shhhh … don’t tell the others, they may not notice.  I’ll post more on project domino effect soon.

One more little note to this story.  I mentioned above that my aunt ended up with 4 of the chairs.  A couple of years ago, she was downsizing to a much smaller home and she mentioned that she didn’t have room for the chairs.  She had offered them to her daughter (cousin Nancy in the picture above) and all of her grandchildren, and sadly no one wanted grandma’s chairs.  At that point, she said to me “I would give them to you, but I know you would paint them.”  Ouch!  I guess she knew me well.  Ultimately though, Nancy took them.  She removed and saved the needlepoint seats and tried to sell the chairs on craigslist with no luck.  Finally, she gave up and offered the chairs to me.  And yes,  I painted them and covered the seats in grain sack.  Then I sold them at my occasional sale to a lovely woman who is using them in her dining room.  Isn’t it better for them to be refurbished and go to someone who will use them?

grandmas chairs soldI’m sorry Aunt Marilyn, but I still think I did the right thing.

the baader-meinhoff phenomenon.

Are you familiar with it?  It’s what happens when you learn about something for the first time, and then suddenly it seems like you are seeing it everywhere.  I feel this way about the new trend towards painting things gold.  I saw it on one blog, and next thing you know it feels like I’m seeing it everywhere.

I don’t know about you, but sometimes I am quite reluctant to follow certain trends.  Maybe it’s because I lived through the ‘gold’ phase once before.  In the 80’s.  And I still have the gold fixtures in my bathtub to prove it.  I keep them well hidden behind the shower curtain.  It’s my own dirty little secret.

My initial reaction towards gold as the new metallic is NO WAY.  I can’t imagine I will ever go there.  I start having flashbacks to big hair, rayon and shoulder pads.

But, to be honest, I’m pretty sure I once said ‘no way’ about mid-century furniture too and now I really enjoy working with it.

midcentury collage

And then I also realized that I’ve already used a little of this new gold.  Not on purpose, I’ll admit, but the drawer pulls on this dresser were already gold, and they worked so nicely with the Boxwood green that I kept them as is.  Trendy, without even realizing it … that’s me!

gold handles

I proceeded to do some research on pinterest, and I’ve decided that the new gold is more of a brushed finished, a little less brassy and shiny than the 80’s gold.  It definitely has more texture.  Sort of a gold leaf, not a true metal.

via pinterest
via pinterest

 And one could use just a pop of it.  I have to say, I love the gold numeral on this black stool.

via pinterest
via pinterest

So … I say … never say never.  I don’t think I’ll be painting all of my radiators gold any time soon, but you never know.

via pinterest
via pinterest

How about you?  Is there a sparkle of gold in your future?

kitchen scale buffet no 3.

Here it is!  My recent craigslist find.  OK, so I couldn’t help myself.  I had to do just one more Kitchen Scale buffet.  I chose to use this color again for several reasons.  First, I had many inquiries on my craigslist ad for the last one and it sold really quickly, so clearly it’s a popular color.  Second, it’s just so darn easy to work with.  And third, I just knew this buffet would also be stunning in this color.

So, here it is.  Vintage buffet no. 3

kitchen scale no 3

So very lovely.

Once again, this one had just the right amount of chippyness.  You can see the detail in this picture of the leg.  Also, I think this picture is a better representation of the actual color.

vintage buffet leg detailI chose to not paint the inside (as usual) because it’s just so putzy.  I know there are furniture restorers out there that do gorgeous things with the insides of their pieces, like adding a fabric lining and so on, but that isn’t me.  Plus, this isn’t an item that will sit around with its doors open for all the world to see.

vintage buffet 2 collage

This one is for sale on craigslist, you can see the ad here.  Update:  this one did not sell on craigslist, so I brought it up to the Round Barn.  I think it will do better there!  It’s so pretty in person, surely someone will fall in love with it.

Don’t worry, I promise not to use Kitchen Scale on the next one.  Even I am growing a little bored with it.

This guy is up next.  I have an idea percolating in the back of my mind, inspired by my painted books.  Check back to see what I do with him!

tall curvy before

fun with craigslist.

I love craigslist.  It boggles my mind that someone came up with this fantastic idea, and that it is FREE!  Really, let’s take a moment to stop and reflect upon that.  Thanks Craig, or whoever you are.  I really appreciate it.

The other day I was surfing the ‘list’, and I came across an ad for a buffet and this was their picture.

hoarder buffet ad

Yep … that’s the picture that they thought would encourage someone to want to buy it.

My first thought was “yikes! trash house!”, but my second thought was “gosh, that might be really pretty!”  So, I contacted the seller.  The first good sign was that her name was Linda … anyone named Linda can’t be bad.  The second good sign was that the buffet was still available.  After speaking with Linda, I got the full story.  Her brother was hired to clean out a friend’s abandoned house, and this buffet was buried amongst the rubble.  She posted the ad, but I would be dealing with her brother.

Off we went to the big city (that’s Minneapolis, for future reference) to take a look.  I confess, I was a little nervous.  I had visions of trying to clear a path through piles of trash to get to the buffet, maybe a couple of rats running to and fro.  Horrible smells permeating the air.  That kind of thing.   But in the end, Linda’s brother was a super nice guy.  Very friendly, and obviously not afraid of a little hard work, since he had already removed two dumpsters of trash from the house, and really had it looking pretty cleaned up.  He apologized for the musty smell of the house before we even went in, but I have to say, it wasn’t that bad.  I’ve definitely smelled worse!  Turned out, his niece was one of my husband’s former yoga instructors.  Small world, huh?

Anyway, we descended into the basement and there she was.  It was love at first sight.  I didn’t even try to bargain for a reduced price, or hide my delight.  I handed over the cash and said “I’ll take it!”

hoarder buffet before

She isn’t super ornate or elaborate, not a lot of frilly details, but filled with sinewy curves that are just elegant.  And look at those legs!  Naturally I will be painting this … in fact, I am going to start as soon as I stop typing.  Check back soon for the after pics!