Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Wallpapered Desk: the After Shots

I finally had enough non-rainy days in a row this weekend to finish up one of my latest DIY projects:


As a reminder, here was the before, scored for free from my dump's "swap shop" - great lines, but in need of a little makeover...



The materials: Elmer's Spray Adhesive, high gloss paint in Fire Dance by Benjamin Moore, and Hi-Shine Glaze.


First I removed the drawer and used spray adhesive to cover it in one of my favorite patterns:  Schumacher's Chiang Mai Dragon in Aquamarine.


Then, after a quick sanding, I applied three coats of Benjamin Moore's Fire Dance in high gloss.  In an attempt to attain a lacquered look, I sprayed the finished product with an aerosol glaze, which gave me more shine than the high gloss paint alone:



I was feeling pretty ghetto about the fact that the Chiang Mai I used for the drawer came from color-copying my pillows at Staples, until I saw this...


...a file cabinet interior designer extraordinaire Mary McDonald covered with photo copied wallpaper as featured in Domino Magazine a few years ago.

Don't forget to click here to enter our giveaway for a free Belly Babies print!
Deb

6 comments:

  1. Deb, that looks fantastic--should go in the Swap Shop Hall of Fame! And when Robert told me about the color copied pillow, I thought that was a stroke of genius, not ghetto. Well done, ma'am.

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  2. Looks fabulous, Deb! I love the part about color copying the pillows at Staples!

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  3. It looks great! I love the sheen on the piece as well as the DIY wallpaper from Kinkos! Brillant....

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  4. Super cute! I would have chosen to paint it blue, but this is sooo much prettier! Especially with the green quatrefoil tray on top!

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  5. this looks amazing--I have to try this sometime. Your project is so inspiring! thanks for sharing it.

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  6. Deb, Peg Richardson loves checking out your
    postings. The chest makeover has to be one
    of my favorites. Would you explain the process of
    the copy of a favorite print and the spray adhesive
    in step-by-step detail. Thanks

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