I tried to finish my table before I had surgery last month, but it didn't quite work out the way I had planned. So it's been sitting partially complete for weeks now in my front room, along with all the other half-finished projects that I'm tackling this month.
The table, I
swear, has been really simple -- it only takes weeks and weeks to complete if you're me. I
shared the construction in a post earlier this summer, and I briefly mentioned my plan to have a metal top bent for it.
I spent a couple hours sanding it down to smooth the rough finish on the inexpensive 2x2's and also lend a more worn, rustic look to the table. I didn't want it heavily distressed with chains or anything.. I just wanted it to look broken in. No crisp corners allowed. I was purposefully uneven and loosey-goosey (a technical term) with my random orbital sander, though; this way even though the corners are all rounded similarly, they're not all straight lines:
The whole goal is to make it look more naturally worn than not, just like distressing paint. Less is usually more in my book.
After sanding, I used pre-stain conditioner since pine is soft and tends to accept stain unevenly which can result in blotchy finished products.
Then I stained the table with a 3:1 mix of Minwax's Ipswich Pine and Provincial stains, since I
wanted a lighter finish on the wood to contrast the darker, rusted metal
tabletop.
Speaking of the tabletop...
And there it is, my new console table. Very easy, pretty inexpensive (
helpful tip:
ask your steel yard or metal supplier how much it will cost before you
order the tabletop! Just because it's rusted and laying in their garbage
can waiting to be recycled doesn't mean they won't charge you full
price once they see that
you want it. Learn from my mistake. Doh.)
My
favorite part about this table is that it's a bit different than most
of the handmade or upcycled furniture I see or make. I love a good
painted-and-distressed piece, but in my (completely uneducated)
decorating opinion, those pieces look more unique and have a greater
chance of passing for authentic when they aren't one of 10 similarly
finished pieces in a home. So I jumped at the chance to make an easy
piece of furniture with an entirely different aesthetic!
What do you think?