Burn Pile Rescue
This hope chest was minutes away from going on a burn pile!
A friend called to tell me that he had a few things I might be interested in, but the fire was lit and if I wanted anything I'd have to come right over. Luckily I was able to get there in time to rescue a few things.
The hope chest was missing the skirt around the bottom that forms the legs. It was also missing the knobs on the faux drawers.
I painted the chest with the color, Caviar, from the Dixie Belle Paint Company. Then I made medallions to cover the knob holes using air dry modeling material and molds from Redesign With Prima.
To create the medallions, I pressed the modeling material into one of the designs in the silicon mold. Unlike other air dry clay, this material is soft and pliable and does not need to be conditioned. I used an old credit card to scrape away any excess clay so that the back of the medallion would be flat. I popped them out by bending the mold and set them aside to dry. When the medallions were dry, I painted them with Dixie Belle's metallic paint in the color, Gold Digger. Then I glued the medallions over the holes using E6000 glue.
I painted some little wooden legs with the Gold Digger metallic paint and screwed them onto the bottom of the chest.
I sealed the hope chest with Howdy Doo Hemp Oil.
The lesson... call before you burn! There are plenty of people out there who love to rescue & revive discarded furniture.
Enjoyed the project?
Resources for this project:
See all materialsComments
Join the conversation
-
Sharron Christie on Sep 10, 2020
Beautiful transformation!
-
-
Elizabeth Fernandez on Sep 10, 2020
What a beautiful save.
-
Frequently asked questions
Have a question about this project?
How do you get the drawers open? These are glued onto the surface of the drawers.
Where did you get your wonderful molds for clay?
How do you open the drawers?