Posts Tagged ‘End Tables’

Resurrecting the End tables

Written on October 15th, 2009 by Peter2 comments

My parents bought these end tables right after they first got married in 1977, the year of the first Star Wars film. We decided that they needed some updating. The form of the tables–their basic lines and structure–were pleasing, and we also liked the glass on top, but we wanted to find some way to unify the whole thing. My darling fiancé had the idea to wrap the bottom shelf in a fun patterned fabric.

Before

{Unfortunately this is the best picture that we have. It’s really more a a during photo.}

The first step was preparing the wood, which meant sanding off 30+ year old stain. I’ve done this with an old desk my grandparents gave me. Not sanding furniture that you want to fix up is a big mistake, because skipping this step makes you miss out on the beautiful texture of old wood, which is what furniture used to be made of before the days of Ikea. Sanding the furniture made me closer to it in some strange way, like I was connecting to it on some empathetic level. This experience all sounds very poetic, but the emotion involved was likely the result of delirium caused by the 100+ degree heat on our back porch, in addition to the fact that we did not own an electric sander. We now do.

Peter Sanding

We then primed the tables with Kilz and painted each one with an eggshell color in satin finish. I learned I do not have the delicate touch required for painting tables. Four years of art school down the drain.

We took the cool and quirky patterned fabric that we found at The Common Thread, and covered the bottom shelf. After securing the fabric using our staple gun, we reinforced the shelf from beneath with metal brackets and screws.

Covering the Bottom Shelf with Fabric

We are really pleased with the results. It has changed the entire feel of the room and has made it lighter, with a fun splash of color. The tables are more unified as objects now, because looking through the glass is actually an engaging experience now, as opposed to before, when the bottom shelf was a dingy, woven wicker. Most importantly, it was fun to work together on imagining and then crafting objects from our space into things that no one else has. Even if we had unlimited income, I would still want these tables in our house.

New Look for an  Old End Table

Fabric Close-up

Look how great it looks next to the shelf we made.

New End Tables

Théo thinks he did all the work.

Théo

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