Step One:
Give it a good cleaning and the degloss it to remove the laquer finish.
Step Two:
Fill holes where old hardware was with wood filler. Let sit for 30 minutes. Sand lightly. Then apply primer. I brushed on Killz to be sure the red undertones of the wood did not come through.
Step Three:
I decided to paint the inside a light grey and the outside white. This took about three coats with a cabinet roller. Once dry I used a razor blade to scrape the paint off the glass. Although it's a pain to scrape all of that paint off, I didn't have painters
tape on hand and was too eager. I did find that using the roller I had more drips than I'd prefer. Grrr. Lastly, I attached the new hardware. I needed to drill new holes as the pulls were bigger than the original ones.
Step Four:
Set in place and style. I divided my hutch into virtual sections. Using only items I already had in the house, I placed similarly shaped and colored items in each section. Doing this allows the eye to travel around the whole display and lends to
cohesiveness.
Project Breakdown-
Cost of Hutch: $125 via online yard sale
Cost of Supplies: $125 via Lowes
Time: 5 days
Difficulty: Easy
What I would do differently next time...
1) Tape the glass
2) Try a brush to paint top coat (maybe this will prevent drips better). I tried a roller because I didn't want to see brush stokes.
3) If I could go back in time, I would not have dropped one of the quarts of paint, causing 1/2 the can to go all over the garage floor. LOL
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