Monday, February 24, 2014

PAINTING UPHOLSTERY french chair

 
I did it ....
I painted a whole chair from the frame to the upholstery.
Everybody else is doing it why not me.
Okay seriously I have painted fabric before but just not to this scale.
I also had not found the right piece to do it with.
I purchased the chair at a second hand store and it was solid and the upholstery was all intact,
however the seat fabric had large water marks on it.
So a painting I went ...
 
 
 
 

 
I used Annie Sloan Chalk Paint Colors,
FRENCH LINEN on the frame and OLD WHITE on the fabric and trim.
The fabric did need 3 coats with a brush because it is porous but its super smooth now like leather.

 
 
 
 
This fabric was very heavy weight tapestry fabric and took the paint better than any I have worked
 with in the past. Velvet sucks the paint in like crazy I dont advise painting it unless you like
spending money. Drop cloth is rough when you paint it but you can sand it smooth.

 
I learned this time around to paint the upholstery first before the frame. 
Do as I say not as I do! 

 
The wood frame has straighter edges than the fabric making it easier to paint the frame last.


 
 
And YES I waxed it once it dried! Same procedure, apply wax, remove excess, then buff.
I am very excited about the possibilities in the future, however I dont think I would
want to paint a piece that you might want to lay on such as a sofa or love seat.
I think this is best saved for occasional chairs and dining chairs.
 
 
UPDATE: she was used for several months as a demo for painting fabric then sold.
She is completely washable and if need be re-paintable in the future.
 
 


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WHAT TO DO WITH A SHRIVELLING PUMPKIN


 
 
This is our Canadian Thanksgiving long weekend.
Most of these photos were taken of Mrs. Ps Thanksgiving table I put together last week at The
 Passionate Home. Im thankful for many things especially the opportunity to step into someone elses
 shop and decorate to my hearts content. This time I even got to snack on some of the props.
 
 
I am also thankful for George.
Since I met him he always puts an apron on this weekend and serves a nice turkey dinner.
For those that ask me "what cant you do?" .... cooking a turkey is near the top of my list.

 
Mrs. P is going on vacation for awhile but plans have already been set for Christmas
decorating at TPH in November.
 
And before I leave you I have one tip for the season.
It is for the pumpkin carver in the family.
 
 
When your carved pumpkin starts to show signs of shrivelling on the front porch run a nice cold bath in your tub to rehydrate him and you can get him back on display in a few hours good as new.
I use to carve pumpkins professionally, a little cinnamon sprinkled on the inside of the lid offers a nice aroma as the candle warms it up.
 
 
HAPPY OCTOBER EVERYONE, ENJOY THE COLORS OF THE SEASON!!

 
 
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Sunday, February 23, 2014

UPDATING A VINTAGE BED FRAME

 
 
Ive had this ornate piece of wood work for a few months just waiting for bed season.
And bed season is going strong with this line up so far ...

 
Next up is an antique oak double bed I purchased for our spare bedroom years ago.
Well the spare bedroom turned into my work space so it never saw the light of day until now. 


If you start with good solid bones its a fairly simple and easy process to update a bed frame.
 

 
The first thing I did was paint the solid steel frame with a flat oil based spray.
The steel gets rusty over time so sealing it with an oil is best.
The second thing I did was to make cross slats so a mattress is all that is needed.
 
 
This frame has no lip to hold the slats in place so I cut scraps to glue to the underside of each board
so they stay tight in place between the rails. All the boards I used were from other furniture pieces,
all recycled!!
 
 
I made the headboard taller by screwing a second headboard onto the back.
Who would have thunk???
 
 
 
Dont forget a little extra on the footboard, but think about if your footboard is going to be covered
up with another piece of furniture such as a bench, table, or dresser. It would be a waste to spent too
much time and decoration on an area that wont be seen.
 

Here you can see the before and after. She is painted in a soft distressed white and perfect for a small space with amazing storage area underneath and only needing a mattress.

 
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DREAMING OF THE SEASIDE blue console table

 
Im certainly in the mood for a vacation it seems.
Dreaming of the blue ocean waters, the sound of the shore birds, and my favorite sea shells.

 
So instead of packing our bags Im painting and decorating in the seaside cottage theme.

 
This table and clock shown below were both painted in custom mixed blues
over a chippy white finish. The base color is ASCP Provence with whites and browns added.
 
 
To achieve a similar look:
you need a good thick white paint layer base (dry)
then chip large areas of the white off with a metal tool creating potholes in the finish
metal chips paint well
 
 
Once you have a horrible looking cow patchwork of missing white paint
cover that with your blue color and once dry sand back the areas you chipped the white away
this will highlight the potholes and show the surrounding edge in a halo of white
giving you a pretty time warn, beach weathered feel.
 
 
The table is just deep enough to use as a laptop desk or
placed in your front entry to make an overwhelming statement everytime you walk in. 

 
 
Georges Etsy Shop
 


 
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Saturday, February 22, 2014

Garden Makeover Ideas Pictures

Kids Furniture Ideas: Garden Makeover Ideas
Kids Furniture Ideas: Garden Makeover Ideas
Kids Furniture Ideas: Garden Makeover Ideas
Budget Garden Makeover Tips | InteriorHolic.
Budget Garden Makeover Tips | InteriorHolic.
Budget Garden Makeover Tips | InteriorHolic.
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Pursuit Of Perfection

"One minute was enough. Tyler said a person had to work hard for it, but a minute of perfection was worth the effort. A moment was the most you could ever expect from perfection." - Fight Club by Chuck Palahnuik


Woodworking for me is akin to the pursuit of perfection. I thought about this today as I started breaking down some pine stock to build the next project. (More on the Stanley Miter Box rehab soon) 

For me there is no more true moment than when you drive a handsaw into the fibers of a board. If you over-think it there are a hundred factors that go into every cut you make, and the more perfect you make your cut, the less work you have to do on the other end. 

A square, vertical saw cut is much easier to clean up on a shooting board. 

So I try to practice perfection every time I make a saw cut. Most of the time I succeed to varying degrees, and sometimes I fail. Sometimes I fail miserably. Perfection comes closer with practice and dedication. Perfection comes closer with every step towards mastery, with every hour closer to my 10,000. Its the satisfaction I get with hand tool woodworking that I never quite achieved in years of plugging in my tools. 

Dont get me wrong. If your path is a powered path, that is fine with me. I dont expect you to take my judgement and use it instead of your own. I have my share of power tools and I use them on occasions when I think theyre the right tool for the job, and sometimes they are. They certainly excel at repetition and drudgery. 

The only thing that every bugs me is when I hear a primarily power tool woodworker wonder why anyone would care to rip a board by hand with excuses like "Its so much slower," and "It takes so much effort" and the mentality that its a tough thing to do. When I get the occasion to do public woodworking demos and Im working with hand tools, people react like its a magic trick. Like Im David Blaine levitating before their eyes. Kids love it and enjoy the work at face value, adults are cynical and keep looking to see if Im tricking them somehow. 

There is no trick to working wood by hand. There is skill, dedication, and practice, but there are no wires, hidden switches, sleight of hand, or misdirection. 

I was ripping some of the pine stock I broke down in half to glue up into panels and I got the notion to shoot a video with my phone to see just how long it takes me. This was standard grade home center pine 1x12, the section is three feet long. The rip saw is about six TPI and was sharpened a few months ago, last fall I think, its not quite due again but its getting close. Ive always sharpened this saw myself so its not supercharged by a professional. Im not what you would call a particularly "in shape" individual so theres no special conditioning or diet involved. Double bacon cheeseburgers do help.

Im trying to make sure no one thinks Im tricking them when they watch this. If theres any other questions go ahead and ask and Ill be happy to answer them. Im just pleased to know I can make this cut myself in roughly the same amount of time and speed if Id taken the time to set up and use my table saw. 


When I want to move faster on a project in my shop, I dont back down and start plugging in "tailed apprentices." I stop taking so many documentation photographs and get to work. Power equals faster is not necessarily an irrefutable truth.

Ratione et Passionis
Oldwolf
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Garden Art Design Everard Park

Garden Art Design - Goodwood - Everard Park South Australia
Garden Art Design - Goodwood - Everard Park South Australia
Garden Art Design - Goodwood - Everard Park South Australia
Garden Art Design Stylish practical garden and landscape designs ...
Garden Art Design Stylish practical garden and landscape designs
Garden Art Design Stylish practical garden and landscape designs ...
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Friday, February 21, 2014

Moving On


"Moving On" Completed 11/13.


Built with knotty pines and black cherry for the case, doors, and back. Rosewood and Bloodwood exotics trim out the details. The interior drawer fronts are spalted maple.


 The wall cabinet is 31 1/2" tall, 17 1/2" wide and 8 1/2" deep.


The exterior is finished with two coats of Watco Natural Danish Oil followed by a hand buffed paste wax top coat.


The interior is finished with burnished in beeswax using the polissoir method rediscovered by Don Williams. With the exception of the drawer fronts which received the same Danish Oil and Wax treatment as the exterior.


 Though the piece was inspired by the work of James Krenov. I was compelled to add some of my own flair. Lately I have been experimenting with the linings of boxes, particularly with paper. I will hand marble my own paper, and infact I did so for the interiors of the drawers, but the doors required larger pieces of paper than I have been able to turn out.

I found the lining for the doors at an area art supply store.


Its difficult to be objective about a piece when youve finished it so recently. I would call this the most ambitious and challenging thing Ive produced, and then there is little wonder why I feel the near insatiable desire to nit pick the whole thing to death. As I look at it I can see every detail I missed, see different design decisions I should have made, and see every wayward straying of both hands and tools.


Still, I believe it has accomplished the overall goals I set out for myself in the beginning.

1) To build a case piece ala Krenov that would push the boundaries of my abilities in design and execution by stepping outside my comfort zone. .

2) To use materials I had been "saving" for a long while.

3) To build without a measured drawing or even a completed plan in place from the start and complete the process from "The Point Of The Tool" with minimal use of a linear measuring device. Instead I tried to let the material help dictate the outcome of the piece.


I titled the piece "Moving On" because that is an apt interpretation of what the work here really means to me. For one, its deciding to be done with this piece that has haunted me, for years in my imagination and for months on my workbench. For another its road marker that breaks from my focus on the techniques of "How" I make something and just dives deeper into the making.


I used to build pieces and break them down on the "How" It was important to me "How" I flattened my stock, or "How" I cut my joinery, The handwork I focused on was my personal badge of honor and the chip on my shoulder. Since starting work in my new shop Ive had the space, power, and convenience to rediscover a lot of my old shop machines that spent most of their time covered in tarps in the old shop. This cabinet saw more time on the table saw than any project Ive built in the last three years. The way I use my table saw is markedly different than how I used to, but I am using it again. Who knows, at this rate I may even shake hands with my router table again.


Its become less about "how" I make something, and more about "what" I make. And in my mind thats opening the doors to many other areas of the craft Ive found fascinating from a distance, but have never been able to muster up the confidence to move into. Veneer work is one of the next things in my sights and not just thanks to the recent "Roubo on Marquetry" book Ive come to adore. Id collected half a dozen books on veneering before I managed to get my hands of Roubos tome, but I was reading them and saying "someday." Now Im ready to revisit them, move on, and say tomorrow.


Im ready for the next step in my evolution.

Ratione et Passionis
Oldwolf
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