Cottage Painting
Cottage Painting

Cottage Style Furniture and Decorating Tips
There are three keys to successfully furnishing a Cottage-style room: white paint, slipcovers and creativity. White paint breathes new life into mismatched, old and discolored furniture and creates a unifying theme that lets all sorts of style blend well into a room. Some furniture on the market today, especially children’s furniture, already comes with white paint, distressed edges and a Cottage-inspired design, conveying the popularity of this relatively new style. The result of a few coats of paint is an airy, bright and cheerful mood within the home.
Slip covers perform the same function for upholstered furniture as paint does for wooden furniture. Worn out flea market finds and hand-me-downs will perk up under a pale (think white or cream) slip cover that may or may not have prints that match your braided rugs and accents. Don’t worry if the slipcovers show a wrinkle or two—you want to look as though a guest can have a seat without disrupting the room. You want the room to look lived in, but avoid crossing the line to unkempt.
Lastly, tap into your creative side as you plan your furniture layout. Consider using items for something other than their obvious function. Turn a favorite chair into a console table that holds a favorite hatbox or a collection of teddy bears. Old cupboards can be used as shelving to hold your collection of teacups and saucers. With Cottage-style rooms, you’re truly limited only by your imagination.
One of the few styles in which stains are a good thing, tea stained textiles in Cottage designed rooms fit the antique and charming image built by eclectic furniture and distressed wood. Tea-staining makes new fabric look well-loved and dulls the sharpness a fresh, white textile can have. Additionally, keep window treatments relatively uncomplicated and airy to let natural sunshine and warmth filter into your room. Complement this natural lighting with bunches of flowers in vases. For extra detail and interest, use trunks, particularly beautiful or quaint plates, mirrors, frames, and lace linens. Don’t be limited by this list; you can find other items to populate your room when browsing attics, vintage stores, flea markets and more.
About the Author
For a HUGE selection of furniture, including bed frames, bedroom sets, and dining room furniture, visit Eco-Furniture.com today.
Painting or re-staining an antique cedar wardrobe, bad idea? Tips? Suggestions?
I have my husbands grandma's cedar wardrobe which appears to be shellacked or clear sealed some how. We are wanting to put it in the nursery for our baby that will be here in March but we have an all white beach cottage look going on in there.
Would it be terrible of me to paint it? I was considering crackle paint.
Thoughts, suggestions, tips?
Thanks so much!
It depends on how much of a valuable "antique" it really is. Many old pieces of furniture only have value as a family piece not as a true antique.
The current finish if it is the original is probably shellac. That can be removed with elbow grease and a lot of denatured alcohol. You could also use a stripper to remove the finish. If you want to paint it, then a good sanding with 220 grit paper should do the trick since some people use shellac as a primer.
Doing a crackle finish can be tricky unless you have done it before. Getting a consistent crackle can be a problem.
Don't forget that in about 5 or 6 years you will want another look quite different from that of a nursery. That sounds like a long time but it will happen faster than you can imagine.
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