Thursday 28 June 2012

First foray into furniture rejuvination



Our neighbours over the road have been doing up their flat with extreme commitment and devotion over the past couple of weeks. Yes, I have been spying on them from our first floor flat living room window.

It all began when I noticed the couple knocking down the lovely, old, metal railing fence around their front garden, and replacing it with a wooden picket fence, which they proceeded to paint baby blue (gasp). Yes, baby blue. At first I was horrified, but they have since colour co-ordinated their front door and added some lovely little windowsill faux bushes in pretty white pots and I can now say, peering judgementally from our living room window, that it looks quite quaint (and much more adventurous than our pair of window boxes, packed with dead, dying, and general reject plants from Homebase).

On one spying occasion I noticed them removing a large collection of furniture, old plants, pictures and upholstery from their flat and leaving it on the pavement as rubbish. Having the thrifty, "waste not want not", "make do and mend" attitude that I do, I scurried downstairs and across the road to see what I could salvage. With the help of Jim - who mostly does always have better things to do, but I asked nicely - we managed to sneakily rescue an old home-made coffee table and a large, heavy, eclectic gold and red wooden mirror:




Both items had seen better days, and were painted/ stained in dark dreary colours, that would do nothing for our tiny, shoebox flat (apart from the mirror which generally will be quite good at splashing light around and making the living room seem a tad larger!)

I set to work washing the mirror and table down with some mildly soapy water and an old sponge to get rid of dust and dirt, and used an old knife to get trickier marks off, and then let them dry completely. It might have been sensible to sand down the furniture a bit, but I thought as it is not going to be used outside and none of it was varnished, a few layers of fresh paint would stick well enough to the exsiting paint.

There was a small selection of paint pots left in the flat when we moved in nearly three years ago, none of which has had a chance to be used until now. I picked a fairly safe looking Dulux pot in "Egyptian Cotton" and prised the lid off with a screw driver expecting to find algae and frogspawn inside, but with a quick stir the paint looked as good as new.

I gave the table and mirror three coats of the Egyptian Cotton each, lettign each layer dry completely (over night) before applying the next.

When finished and all dry, I was more pleased with the resulting white/cream colour of the paint on the furniture than the yellowy white colour that the paint pot depicted. Also, the carving on the mirror frame was still visible under three layers of paint, which I had been worried about disappearing.

I had fun playing around with the position of the table, which goes well with the neutral and pale scheme of our living room, but I have yet to find a home for the mirror as we already have at least one large mirror in every room!




Happy painting!



Monday 18 June 2012

Large stripey cushion cover



I made this cover a good few months ago, but never got round to adding it as a post to the blog.


I had found myself with a rather large, bare cushion and some stripey material that I picked up cheaply on a recent trip to Ikea, which had not yet found a use, other than occasionally adorning the side of the sofa with the nail varnish spill on...


After some umm-ing and ahh-ing and a bit of tape-measuring, a handy, zippable cushion cover was born.

All I did was...






Measure and cut out two squares of fabric 1-2 inches bigger than the square cushion all the way around.





I then gathered my tools (pins, needle, thread, sewing machine, scissors) and began pinning the two squares of fabric together, face to face, along three edges. I left the fourth edge open in order to attach a zip later on and turn the cushion cover the right way out eventually.


With the fabric still inside out (two pieces pinned face to face) I sewed along each of the three pinned sides with a sewing machine.


When all three sides were stitched, I folded back the fourth edges by about an inch and pinned them to make the hems for the zip to be sewn on to. I pinned the zip (about an inch shorter than the length of the cushion) to both sides of the top egde to the inside of the hems (now on the outside of the fabric, as it the cover is still inside out). Unzipping the zip at this point makes this easier.

 
When pinned in place, I sewed along each underside of the zip (the bit you don't see when the zip is done up). Where the zip didn't reach to the ends of the edge of the cushion cover, I turned the cover out the right way, and sewed the two sides of the cover together at each end of the zip, by hand, making sure that I sewed right up to where the zip started and finished, at each end, to give a neater finish.


In full swing on the sofa...!