Buffet Revitalization.. Seriously!!

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Ok, so it wasn’t love at first sight.. she was VERY ugly!! I think she had 3 knobs, all mix-matched, water spots and peeling veneer.. but look at those curves (kind of hard to see in the cell phone picture above). She had mahogany veneer, the top drawers were concave, the middle drawer was convex and the bottom drawer had a flat front. She had original wood wheels and some intact carving onlay on the front legs. What I didn’t see until I got it home, thanks to the cr*p that was sitting on top of it, was a couple of VERY deep scars through the top veneer! I love to sand flat surfaces (seriously what is wrong with me?) so I started to try to remove as many of the scratches as possible. Most of them came out without effecting the veneer, but I had two holdouts and they were deep! I wanted to keep the top natural (stained) so I first tried to fill them with a stainable wood filler.. that didn’t work.. the filler did accept the stain but it clearly was a visible scar.. HUGE visible scar! On to option 2.. first let me say that I have never removed veneer before, but I looked it up on the web and it didn’t look too difficult. So out came my iron and a piece of parchment paper (to save the iron surface). I heated up the veneer and wow it looked like it was working!! But NO.. wait.. what is this..? The veneer layer, which is usually very thin, was SUPER thick. I had only removed a very thin top portion of the veneer, the majority of it was still there!! This stuff was so thick I was not heating it up enough to release the glue from the veneer!! I hit the web again.. based on my research I concluded I needed to be more aggressive. So I went to Home Depot and bought a small butane torch, it was one of those tiny ones that looks like the ones you can get at the cooking stores for toasting your creme brulee, so I felt pretty safe… I’m not going to kid you I was scared to use it.. I wasn’t one of those kids who liked playing with fire and honestly I’m a “little” accident prone. Long story short I got it started and used it to heat up, sometimes burn, the thick veneer to release the glue. I used a 3 inch scraping knife to pry up the veneer as I went along heating up about an inch or so at a time. Did you see the top of that buffet? I would work on it a few times a day, about a half of an hour at a time. It took DAYS to take that stuff off!! I also removed the veneer off of the front of the drawers. This was much thinner stuff and very dry. I basically sanded it off with 60 grit sandpaper! One side of the buffet had some veneer that had to be removed as well, I used a combination of sanding and heat to remove it. I also had some nasty velvet (?) from the center silverware drawer to remove.. so brilliant.. I used wallpaper remover and the stuff came up so easy! I cleaned out all of the drawers with Murphy’s Oil soap and they were ready to go!

I wish I had the forethought to have taken a picture of the “beast” at this point. The wood under the veneer was very pretty. I tried and tried to determine what it was but I couldn’t figure it out! The edges of the top and the tops of all of the drawers had a solid piece of mahogany banded to it.. it looked great! At this point I needed to decide what to do with the piece.. ok so you may be thinking shouldn’t you have decided that BEFORE you spent a million years removing veneer? Yes, is the answer to that question, but a lot of times I just get into a project not knowing the exact direction I will be going… not very efficient I know, I’m working on improving that!!

Here is what I ended up deciding to do with the buffet. I stained the top and drawer fronts dark walnut (one of my favorite colors) and I painted the cabinet with a new color of Annie Sloan’s Chalk Paint I had just gotten, Coco. I distressed the paint and waxed and buffed the entire piece. The top received about 5 coats of wax, which is a little excessive I know, but it came out beautifully! I didn’t have any original knobs and only 3 of the original escutcheon plates for the keyholes! So I ordered some knobs & escutcheon plates from Myknobs.com, which is my favorite go to knob supplier, and waited.. When they came in I was thrilled with how they looked on the piece! I used 3 of the salvaged original key hole surrounds on the top drawers and the new escutcheon plates on the bottom two drawers. Sounds weird but it looked great! (Picture below is before I installed key hole changes)

After – Empire Buffet, Left Side
After - Empire Buffet Front View

She’s so pretty now!! I wished I could keep it, but it was not to be a “mine” but a “yours” (now you see what the blog title means ๐Ÿ™‚ I listed her for sale on Craig’s List and about a week later I had a women and her young (16ish) daughter come by to look at a cabinet I had for sale. Well they fell in love with the buffet and bought it for the daughter’s room to use as a dresser. They were redecorating the daughter’s room and felt that this would be a great fit for it.. she has a huge, tall antique bed that her grandmother had given her.. lucky girl! I hope that this will be a piece she will treasure for many, many years!

Ok, so this post seemed a little wordy, but there was a lot to do on this piece! What do you think about the finished product? Did I give you too much information in the post? Thanks for looking!

Linking this post up to:
The Power of Paint Party
Crafty Scrappy Happy Me Thursday
Sisters of the Wild West
Restore Interiors

I was featured at: Apartment Therapy

46 comments

  1. Well, your picture had me at “ugly”! I love the lines of this piece and would have snagged it up myself! I just love what you did with it and what a lucky young lady to end up with it. I would have a hard time selling it, to be honest with you. You breathed new life into this beauty!

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  2. Lovely, you did a fantastic job, I also did a dresser, leaving the beautiful drawer fronts, I love the wood and paint together. I have tried wax, but never get the look I want, you did a lot of coats, do you buff? I will check out your blog, hope to have you visit me when you have time. Happy New Year

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    1. Marilyn,
      I will certainly check out your blog! Thanks for the encouraging words! I have been using wax as a top coat for many years and love it. After it has hardened I buff it with 0000 steel wool and then a soft cloth. It gives it a beautiful shine and a wonderful feel.

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  3. You did an awesome job…from ugly to gorgeous! I’m a new follower so I can see more of your great transformations. Stop by anytime, cause I love new blog friends, Lori

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    1. Thanks Pam! I like to stain the drawers when I’m using strong colors to help break up or tone down the color a bit.. Also when the drawers are gorgeous I have a hard time painting them … Thanks for taking the time to leave a comment!

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  4. Beautiful Job!!! Your hard work paid off in a beautiful piece! I’m sure the young lady will cherish it, but it had to be hard to let it go! You have a wonderful start on your blog. I have been blogging sine May 2010 & I am still learning new things all the time to improve my blog & posts. Come by & visit! I am a new follower, not only because I think you are interesting, but also because I know how hard it is to get started with followers! Best of luck & welcome!
    Blessings,
    Cindy
    PS…I would let you know one thing if you haven’t heard it before. It is best to go to the visitor’s blog or email, who made the comment, to respond to them. Usually bloggers don’t revisit a post they have left comments on. Just an FYI!

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  5. That is an AMAZING makeover! So beautiful. We have a dresser that has veneer issues on the sides so I had planned to do a similar treatment, with painting everything but the top and drawer fronts. It is birdseye maple and we plan to just do poly on those and not stain them.

    Visiting from the Shabby Nest!

    Jenny

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  6. your hard work was well worth it. it’s a beautiful transformation. and i usually go in to projects not knowing what direction they will take either.

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  7. Absolutely beautiful! I love the combination of stained and painted pieces. I hope you sold this for like a gazillion dollars! That was a lot of work. I had a piece like that, and my post title was “The Beast”. I had a nice visit reading all your posts. You are very entertaining! I’m a new follower and I’ll be back!

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  8. I see you used coco,my new fav ascp shade:) what color did you layer on it to get the washed look? thanks! beautiful piece btw!!

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  9. ah! you can see that now as i look back at some of the photos:) thanks for your reply! I have a telephone table that I’ve painted coco,wanting to add to it, couldn’t decide on an “old white”top layer,a washed down recipe,or leave it alone!! I have brown waxed another piece of coco furniture, but I’m feeling it would be too dark for this piece. on another note, have you used ascp on fabric? I would like to try a stencil of sorts on the canvas cloth I’m using to reupholster the bench portion. thanks again!

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    1. Hmm… old white and coco do look great together, instead of washing it do you have any areas you can highlight / accent with OW or another color? I have not used chalk paint on fabric, although I have gotten a fair amount of it on fabric by mistake! I can tell you I thought it would wash out.. it did not ๐Ÿ˜ฆ I use silkscreen paint on fabric… it is great! It looks like the fibers soak up the paint, rather than the paint sitting on top… just a thought! Good luck!

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  10. Wow! You did a fantastic job on this piece. And no, your detail on what you did is much appreciated. I like to take pictures at every step along the way — the screw-ups and all — just for my own documentation, as I don’t have a blog, but it remains instructive through other projects as well. This is what it’s all about — turning an old, tired, and unloved piece into something that anyone would be proud to own. I suspect that dresser is going to be around for another fifty years now. Nice work.

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  11. Hi! What a lovely, lovely re-do! I refinish and/or paint older furniture for a living, too, and let me say I am so impressed with this red-do.

    Bravo for being brave enough to try removing veneer using a butane torch! I am just now wanting to learn about veneer removal, etc. And the wax coats on the wood are sublime.

    As to having a plan before you do a piece, I would say not to worry if you don’t have a plan. Every piece of furniture is so different, I think it is actually best to deconstruct, sand, work with a piece and get to know it a little bit before deciding what the little beauty needs. So many times my “plan” has had to change, and usually for the better.

    I am following you now – let’s have fun!

    Geri in Kansas City

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