Showing posts with label old atlas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label old atlas. Show all posts

Wednesday, 10 June 2020

The Mediterranean Mirror

Welcome!  Hope you are safe, happy and well!

So, the latest in my long list of Furlough Furniture projects (upcycled pieces I've only had time to complete because of coronavirus furlough!) is what I'm calling my Mediterranean Mirror.


This mirror frame with little drawers was something I found at a car boot sale, probably about 7 or 8 years ago.  I made a start on it at that time, but lack of time meant I then stored it in the garage and it didn't see the light of day again until recently.

It had at some point been a woodwork project for someone - it is clearly handmade and not built in a factory.  I love that about it.  Despite it being very solid and having great potential, the  handmade drawers were a nightmare - they didn't fit properly and were made of such hard wood, it was very difficult to work on them.  I very nearly gave up on them.  I was ready to make drawers out of papier mache to fill the gaps!

I persevered though (one thing I did have was time!) and ended up eventually with three beautifully fitting and very well-sanded drawers.  There is still a kind of mismatched rusticity about them, but I really quite like that.


The maps were from an old world atlas: I chose maps from the Mediterranean - Crete, Malta and the Balearics all feature (and hold memories for us) as well as the gateway to the Med - the Straits of Gibraltar (which we may well one day visit, if we are ever allowed out of lockdown!).


I tore the maps to shape rather than cut them, stuck them on using PVA, varnished over them with more PVA, then waxed them for a more hardwearing finish.


I then waxed over the wood and painted finish, too - inside as well as outside.  The finish is beautifully smooth, almost like glass.


I made little plaits from string for the handles, taped at each end, which I threaded through the holes which were already in the drawer fronts.

I then glued the overlap down inside with a glue gun (you can see some of the overlap inside the drawer, below).  I figured a long overlap would add to the strength of the handles.



I didn't have an actual mirror to fit.  I looked online and my first quote was for over £150.  I found another for £52 including postage, which I was happier with.  But then my daughter's partner recommended St George Glass in Leigh (they have a branch in Bolton, too).  I paid just over £30 and collected myself.  They were speedy, efficient, helpful and polite and I would definitely recommend them if you are based in north west England.

I also cut a piece of hardboard to back the mirror.


Fixing the mirror into the back was a lengthy, frustrating and complicated process!  I reused the original fixings (above, nicely cleaned from their previously very rusty state) but the wood was so solid it was incredibly difficult to screw into. It is a very hard, heavy and dense wood.  The fixings had been previously nailed in (you may be able to see the remnants of an old nail, just above the fixing in the picture above).  I can see why they were nailed in but I now feared for my mirror glass if I got the hammer out!


I even broke the bradawl in the process of trying to make some screw holes!

The finished piece is extremely heavy, so I think it might lead onto another project - a piece of furniture to rest on so I am not relying solely on new-build walls to support it.  We definitely can't risk this falling onto someone!


I love these map projects so much I can feel some more might be coming on before too long!  

I am happy to report that we have now signed contracts for our new house, so the move should be imminent.  Can't wait, this has been a very long time coming!

Friday, 5 June 2020

The Map Cupboard - Upcycled Furniture Project

Hello!  Hope you are keeping safe and well in these really strange times.

The upcycled furniture project I'm showing you today took me a while, but it was a thoroughly enjoyable project and two things I had in abundance were time and maps!

This project is likely our house be known as the map cupboard - but it isn't a cupboard to store maps, rather it is now lined with maps.

Map lined cupboard
It's the British Isles but not as you know it!



This piece of furniture started out life as a wedding present for my parents in 1953 (along with a dressing table and wardrobe).  I remember it from my childhood, as well as mum and dad gifting it to me in 1980 when I got my own first home.  It is still strong and sturdy but it was looking dated as well as battle-scarred, having been in two homes with children, spanning several decades.

Old and very tired
I started by painting the outside white. Neat and clean, but very predictable - and while it was OK, I wasn't over the moon with it.

A bit neater looking, but I couldn't help thinking something was missing
I still had time on my hands, and a handy atlas of the British Isles... so I started tearing and gluing.

Just like being back in nursery school - lots of paper and glue!

We were at the beginning of lockdown, and The Range was the only place for miles around that I could buy PVA and paint. I queued for a long time, feeling so guilty about going out for non-essential shopping that I also bought some frozen chips (fries)! (Because we all know they are essential!).  The PVA felt way more essential than the chips, though...

The PVA meant I could make a start on the maps


I really enjoyed this stage, tearing up the old atlas and placing the pieces of map together

I glued torn pieces of map in place, then glued over the top.  PVA works well as a varnish, but does make the paper under it wrinkle slightly - this does go away as it dries, but always gives me a little bit of anxiety in case it doesn't.  Just remember this if you are trying your own project!

PVA's other weakness is it can become soft if wet, even after drying.  It's not likely to get wet in this cupboard, but just in case, I applied a couple of layers of furniture wax afterwards. This will also make the finish more hard wearing.

A road map of Warrington town centre, my home town
You may recognise some of this

I had to add this tiny scrap of the south east coast when I realised it had a village called California!
The reference to California (above) is for Jane - my best friend from my school days in the 1970s, who now lives in California.  Jane unknowingly inspired me to put these projects onto my resurrected blog, as she was so interested in what I was doing and looking for inspiration for her own furniture projects.  Thank you for the idea for this, Jane!


I still felt the white finish was just a bit boring so painted the drawers pale blue (I used the white paint with some cerulean acrylic paint stirred in).

I like it better with the blue drawers.  I might try sanding some of the white paintwork back a bit more

I like the blue and white contrast

I sanded back some of the wood just inside the cupboard doors and waxed it



Overall, I think it's been a successful project in many ways.  The maps were a lot of fun to put in, and I think I will be happy to have this in my new home!