September 23, 2011

Cedar Chest Project Continued

Here is the finished cedar chest!

This is how I did it...
The items I ordered arrived!

Fabric from JoAnn's

Drawer knobs from Home Depot

Quilt matting from JoAnn's

As you read in the first post I used a walnut for a quick fix of polishing dinks in the wood 
and I cleaned that cedar chest.
This looks pretty nice even without any decoration.
I removed these original knobs:

and replaced them with these:


The only issue I ran into was the length of the bolts for these knobs - they were too long for the cedar chest wood. I cut one shorter - DON'T DO THAT.
I eventually bought shorter ones from Lowe's and used some washers to screw the bolts in tightly.


I took the quilt matting and just folded to cover the original seat to add extra padding.

 I cut the fabric to fit over the original seat and matting 
with a few extra inches to fit around all the layers.

Using a staple gun, I stapled the fabric into the sides of the ply wood of the original seat. 
This was a tricky part since the ply wood is thin, but it had to be done.
If I had stapled the fabric from the underside of the seat, people would be puncturing their behinds. 
Luckily, the busy fabric hides the staples from being visible. 

Finally, I used an adhesive spray from Lowe's to glue the extra fabric down underneath the seat so flaps wouldn't be sticking out. 

Here's the final product again.


Mr. W and I love the texture and the accent it brings to our room.
And we enjoyed the fun little, inexpensive project.

What do you think?

2 comments:

  1. Very easy to follow step-by-step procedure. I very much enjoy the process narration and photos.
    Thank you for sharing this.

    ReplyDelete