![]() |
|
The Prim Kitchen As with many words, phrases, and trends, after a while of repeatedly hearing and seeing them, they are visually and audibly overdone and we overlook them and move on to something else. A few years ago the moniker, shabby chic exploded into the decorating scene and was wildly popular with both primitive & cottage look seekers for a new look to their homes. For primitive decorators, while staying true to the look they loved, it was a cleaner look, mostly done in various hues of whites. For the cottage look, it was a way for people who had decorated in the primitive dark shades to change a room to perhaps a more feminine setting. Myself, attracted to anything primitive and preferring original paint, peeling paint, or never any paint, but still primitive, often found myself with pieces that would be considered either primitive or shabby chic. My house became filled with primitive furniture and collections. And I loved the look. EXCEPT for my kitchen! It was stuck in the 70's! My collections were lost against a dark, busy backdrop. Original birch cupboards, that I had added white porcelain knobs to for a while to change the look, sage green counters and stove. The ugliest and faded print abitibi paneling in greens and golds pattern (definitely a 70's thing, and quite nasty after that look went out), I couldn't figure out what to do with this dark, very outdated kitchen. Not wanting to spend a fortune to completely redo it with new cupboards, and definitely wanting to lighten it, I paid more attention to the peely paint look on some of my primitive pieces and became determined to have white cupboards & walls. But not solid white. I wanted them to look old. A white peely paint wood tray bought in Ohio provided me with JUST the technique I needed! We bought 3 different Latex ( do NOT use oil ) paints. Good quality. The base coat the sage green of my counter tops. One off white to cover that nasty abitibi and the ceilings, and another color of white close in color to the first one, so as not to have a continual color of the same white throughout the kitchen. Now let the cupboards dry! We didn't use anything over top to preserve them. My once dark, very outdated kitchen is now light, white and primitive. I LOVE it!. Cost? 3 gallons of paint (didn't use it all), the inexpensive wax ring, and some elbow grease. One admirer wondered WHERE I got those old cupboards!
All Rights Reserved © 2008 A Prim Krafters Journal |
Special Friends
Favorite Forums
|