(Note: This post was originally published on my past blog, Hikes and Crafts.)
I’ve always been very opposed to spending too much money for anything, and I feel no differently about that while I try to furnish my new apartment. That’s why any offer of free or cheap furniture is something I can hardly turn down, and how I ended up with some very beat up end tables. I found these tables on a Facebook “garage sale” and picked them up at a small horse ranch (after they had been outdoors for several months.)
I’ve been reading DIY blogs and the like for years, so I thought this would be a piece of cake. I planned on just quickly sanding the top and then painting it white–no big deal! Or… so I thought. Apparently, reality is always a little more difficult than the imagined.
After sanding them for about an hour, I realized I couldn’t take off all that stain with just some sanding, so I left them for the day. Two days later, armed with more knowledge on the matter and some paint-and-stain stripper, I went at these end tables again. The can of stripper said to paint it on and let it sit for 15-30 minutes, then scrape it off. Naive as I apparently am, that seemed so simple and easy. I thought I’d be done with the stain stripping process in about an hour and ready to paint. However, it took FOUR coats of stripper and quite a bit of sanding after that to get to a paint-ready surface.
One week later (too much school and work to continue that day!), I finally got around to painting and sealing the tops of these tables. I used a Clark & Kensington Satin Enamel in White paint to prime the tops and then painted them with Valspar’s Pure White (both 99c at Ace this month!). These are technically base paint samples to be tinted in store, but I needed a white, and they were perfect! I used an old acrylic brush to lay down the paint and then a tiny roller (from Roller-Lite’s Tiny Touch-It-Up Kit) to even out the paint. Three coats was perfectly sufficient for these tables! After this was all dry and ready for finishing, I used a water-based polyurethane to seal the tables (Varathane Soft Touch Matte Polyurethane.) I used that water-based poly because I have seen the results of an oil-based polyurethane on a light surface (so much yellowing!) For the polyurethane, I also did three coats, each very thin and done about 1.75 hours apart. I used a Wooster 1.5 inch tapered acrylic brush to apply the polyurethane.
I am thinking about switching out the metal hardware for one that complements the top more, but for now, I’m feeling pretty done with these! This might be a really easy re-do for some people, but since it was my first, it felt pretty difficult. Hopefully I will continue to do things like this and will be able to look back at this and realize how much easier I could have made it–but for now, this is what it is. I am excited to see them take their place in my new apartment once I move in (soon!)