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When
we looked at our house, it was something most people thought "oh, nice
house, nice lot, but TONS of work." The ironic thing is one of my good
friends said she walked through the house too when it was on the market
and they loved the house--but thought it was a lot of work and didn't
think twice about it. Well Scott and i were up for the challenge and on a
hunt for a forever house with a good price tag, and shockingly enough
one that was a fixer-uper! Yes, we are certifiably crazy, especially
considering i was pregnant with twins at the time we were looking for a
fixer-uper! The house was bank owned--enough said foreclosures are
always trashed. Well, i loved the huge kitchen with tons of cabinetry
and storage and stand up/sit in breakfast bar, loved the island, and the
granite counters...but i HATED the cabinets. Not my style. So i
decided to refinish them. Everyone always asks me how i did it, so here
we go, you score with a tutorial! I wanted to go with an old world
antique look, and wanted two-toned cabinets. I still love the black and
white combo but i may surprise myself and go all white before long, but
needless to say i do love the way they turned out. So to tell you how i
did it. I did a prime, paint, seal method. My cabinets were in good
shape, there wasn't any areas that needed smoothing out so instead of
using an electric sander, i used liquid sander which took me only 45 min
to wipe down all of my cabinets compared to several hours of electric
or hand sanding. I bought it at Home Depot its "Klean strip" brand and
called liquid sander deglosser. Its in the paint supply section. I
think one bottle was $18 and i have used it for several projects
including my kitchen table redo {of course ill share that project too}.
You just rub it on your cabinets with an old rag for a few seconds all
around to get the glossy finish off. I used a high density foam roller
to paint the cabinets, it would be much easier and quicker if you had a
paint sprayer, but at the time i didn't have one {sigh i do now,
would've made life easier} these are small rollers and are great for
painting furniture too! So, i taped off my cabinets to protect the walls
from paint, and started painting. I used a foam brush in hard to reach
areas, and did about 2 coats of black on the upper half of my kitchen,
and 3 coats of white on the bottom half. I wanted the oak color to show
through in some of the black spots for an old world look so did less
coats of black. With the black cabinets i just used a fine grain sheet
of sand paper and hand sanded to distress along the edges and grooves
only. For the white cabinets i tried a few techniques until i got the
look i was going for-first i tried a glaze and brown paint mixture-hated
it, then i went with glaze and black paint mixture-hated that too. I
ended up taking a small art paintbrush and brown color of paint and hand
painted to distress the edges how I wanted them. I personally loved
the all white clean look before distressing on the white portion of my
cabinets, but...I saw my two year old rub his Cheeto covered hands on
those white cabinets and realized my sanity would not last if i kept
them pure white. I was so glad i distressed them after having done it a
few months later I was wiping down my cabinets and realized there was
lot of peanut butter smeared on my island which i didn't even notice
because of the distressing. WIN!! Anyway back on task. After i painted
the cabinets I sealed them again using foam roller/brush combo-only one
coat with a water based polycrylic semi-gloss finish to ensure the
cabinets wouldn't chip. I did them 5 months ago and no chipping still.
This was such an easy method and realistic for me to do SLOWLY over
time, thank goodness for a patient hubs who put up with multi-colored
cabinets for a while before I finally finished! The colors i used if
you like this look were cottage white from Dunn Edwards, and premixed
black Valspar paint from Home depot. Use exterior grade paint on
cabinets and doors, it adheres better and doesn't fade. If you want a
mahogany look stain you will have to use an electric sander to sand the
cabinets, then take a rag with your color stain and rub on evenly until
you get the look you want, and of course seal after with polycrylic.
I'm still on the hunt for the perfect hardware, and have yet to find
it...if you have any suggestions let me know!
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