15 Ways to Give Your Furniture New Life

Let’s face it, buying new furniture is expensive. So expensive, in fact, that I’ve never actually done it (besides couches, because I’m not awesome/crazy enough to DIY a couch). There is also the problem that new furniture is, well… boring. To me it all looks the same and  basically has zero personality. A great (and super cheap!) solution to this is to redo old furniture. But what do you do with your ratty old thrift store furniture once you get it home?

15 ways to give your furniture new life - Domestic Imperfection

1. Paint it a fun color

Paint your furniture a fun color

The simplest and most dramatic way to give your furniture some personality is to paint it a bold color. I know, it’s scary…at first. But the chances are that you will love it, and your fierce new furniture will become your favorite things in your house. And if it doesn’t…then you can just paint it again. That’s the great thing about painting furniture, it’s cheap and easy to change.

Fun colored furniture posts – green dresser, yellow command center table, paisley stenciled table, end table dog bedgreen porch chair, toy boxsmall yellow shelf

2. Paint it white

Paint your furniture white

If you’re a neutral loving kinda gal, or if bold colors just aren’t your thing, then you can never go wrong by painting your furniture white. It’s crisp, clean, and matches everything.

White furniture posts – the bed that almost killed me, crappy $5 table, hexagon leaf table, funky old side table, barstools, file cabinet makeover

3. Don’t paint it

Don't paint your furniture

This kinda goes again the whole idea of the post, but I love natural wood. I think each room should include some natural elements in the design, and a beautiful piece of wooden furniture is the perfect place to do that. I actually don’t have a ton of examples of this, but I am currently on the hunt for two vintage dressers that I can use and leave beautiful and natural.

Natural wood furniture posts – farmhouse table

4. Paint part of it and leave other parts wood

Leave some wood on your furniture

This is one of my favorite ways to redo furniture, it gives you the best of both worlds. Popular ways of doing this is to paint everything but the top, paint everything but the drawers, or to just paint the drawers and leave the rest wood.

 Paint and wood furniture posts – paisley stenciled table, Indian inlay stenciled table, small yellow shelf, funky side table, green dresser, porch entry table, union jack table, kids step stool.

5. Add a design using stain

Add a design to your furniture using stain

This technique gives beautiful results and is surprisingly easy. All you need is a flat surface, a few colors of stain,and some painters tape.

Stain design posts – union jack coffee table

6. Stencil it.

Stencil your furniture

Stencils are a great way to add interest to your furniture. They are simple to use, fairly inexpensive, and can be used many many times (on more than just furniture!).

Stenciled furniture posts – paisley stenciled table, Indian inlay stenciled table, dog house end table

7. Hand paint a pattern

hand paint a design on your furniture

Maybe you don’t have a stencil, don’t want to spend money on one, or just can’t find one you love.  You still have lots of options! If you have a steady hand and a little artistic talent you can just hand paint a design onto your furniture. Even if you have no artistic talent you can do something like I did on my toy box – that design is done with a pattern I printed off the internet, transferred to a cereal box, and traced.

Hand painted furniture posts – hexagon leaf table, toy box

8. Give it the dirty cowboy treatment

Give your furniture the dirty cowboy treatment

Yes, the Dirty Cowboy Treatment, you read that correctly. This is my own twist on distressing furniture and you can GO HERE to read a full tutorial. If you don’t want your furniture to look pristine and new, but don’t want to look like it’s been through a hurricane then this is the look for you.

Furniture projects that include The Dirty Cowboy treatment – tutorial, dog house end table, yellow command center table, paisley stenciled table, and (kinda) children’s stepstools and growth charts.

9. Distress it

distress your furniture

I’m not huge on distressing furniture, but I do like to give my my pieces a very slight distressing,…mostly because my kids are going to dent, chip, and distress it anyway, so I might as well be prepared. Distressing is incredibly easy to do, you literally just take sandpaper and sand the parts of the piece where paint would wear off after time (raised areas, corners, near handles, etc). You can do this lightly with fine grit sandpaper, heavier with gritty sandpaper, or you can take and orbital sander to it and distress the living daylights out if it…your call.

Distressed furniture posts - the bed that almost killed me, crappy $5 table, yellow shelf, upcycled porch entry table, command center table ….

10. Add textured wallpaper

Add textured wallpaper to your furniture

This is another very easy way to add some subtle personality to your furniture. You can purchase the textured (and paintable!) wallpaper at hardware stores or you can buy it on Amazon. It’s simple to apply, I just used mod podge, painted it to match, and caulked the edges. For a full tutorial you can read the post below.

Textured wallpaper posts – crappy $5 table

11. Upholster with a fun fabric

Upholster your furniture in a fun fabric

Evidently for me, “fun fabric” means blues, greens, and white, haha. I like what I like! If your furniture needs some new upholstery then be bold and grab something fun. Look at that rocker, for example…. it wouldn’t be nearly as awesome if it had been upholstered something  solid or neutral.

Fun fabric posts furniture posts – dumpster rocker, big fat nursery chair

12. Upholster it with a dropcloth

Upholster your furniture with a dropcloth

Yes, a dropcloth…like the  scratchy fabric thing that you buy at hardware stores to catch paint. It makes a great material for furniture… it’s thick, durable, neutral, and relatively inexpensive. It almost has a natural fiber look, and if you throw it in the wash it actually comes out quite soft.

Dropcloth furniture posts – barstools

13. Add something unexpected

Add embellishments to your furniture

Add something to your furniture that wasn’t there before. In the picture above I used scrapbook paper to give my file cabinet a tiled herringbone look, and I added yardsticks to my kids stepstool (which I think looks awesome). You can seriously add anything -nailhead trim, expanded metal, pennies, buttons, new hardware, photos, mirrors, tiles, stones, fabric, washers….do I need to continue?

Furniture embellishment posts – file cabinet makeover, kids step stool, and penny countertop (not really a furniture project, but still applicable).

14. Give it a new purpose

repurpose your furniture

Before you get rid of an old piece of furniture take a closer look and see if it can serve another purpose. Dressers in particular are great for this, they are super versatile. I made one into a bathroom vanity and I have sitting in my garage waiting to be transformed into a media center, but you could also use them as buffets, changing tables, benches, bookshelves, sofa tables, potting benches, hall tables, kitchen islands, and a variety of other things.

Furniture repurposing posts – dresser into bathroom vanitybroken vanity harp into porch entry tableend table dog bed

15. Combine any of the above suggestions

I’m sure you noticed that most of my projects were repeated a few times, and that’s because I usually do a few techniques on a single piece of furniture. The paisley stenciled table, for example, was painted a fun color, had natural wood, was stenciled, distressed, and dirty cowboyed. The hexagon leaf table was painted white, had a hand panted pattern, distressed, and glazed. Oh my gosh, glazed! I forgot to add that one. Surprise bonus way #16 – glaze your furniture. Haha. But really, just have fun with it. Break the rules., try new things you’re not sure will work, and make it yours.

Furniture makeover ideas

25 DIY Shower Curtain Tutorials (Including My Own)

25 DIY Shower Curtain Tutorials

If you are in need of a shower curtain or just want to add a little something to your current one, than look no further… today’s post has more ideas than you can handle. And only one of them comes from me.

I feel in love with this pattern at World Market and just had to buy the shower curtain (I’ve already made pillows from the matching placemats). I had a perfectly good shower curtain  from Target already…but it was kiddie themed, and as much as I try I just don’t like kid stuff. So I ditched it. This one is beautiful (although it – and the entire bathroom – photograph terribly) but it has the same problem that 99% of shower curtains have. It is too dang short. It’s like my bathtub is wearing high waters.

Too short shower curtain2

If I hang it to where it covers everything it looks too small, and if I raise it to where I want it to be then it doesn’t even cover the tub. Not okay. So I found fabric that (kinda sorta) matched and set out to make my beautiful short curtain into a beautiful long one. I made my fabric about three times as wide as the curtain so that I could make ruffles . To make big  ruffles all you do is loosely sew a tread the length of the fabric and then bunch the fabric up on that thread. I hope that makes sense, and if not the pictures should help…

making ruffles

Then I sewed it to the back of my curtain.

sewing ruffles

BAM, floor length curtain.

add fabric to your shower curtain to make it longer

Except I didn’t like it all that much, so I added two lengths of brown ribbon along the seam and it looked much better.

add fabric to your shower curtain to make it longer

How to make a shower curtain

Raising my curtain rod made my liner too short as well and I didn’t want to buy another longer one, so I ripped up some fabric, tied it on a loop, and made it long enough to cover the tub. It’s ghetto for sure, but no one can see it. Unless of course you’re taking a shower, but in that case I hopefully know me well enough to not be surprised by this.

Add length to your liner

While I’m snapping pictures of my bathroom I just had to take the time to tell you about a little something that you MUST buy if you have little kids. Yes it’s a toilet lid and seat, and it is amazing. I love it about as much as you can love something that goes on a toilet.

built in potty seat for toilet

It’s the Bemis child/adult built in potty seat and it is perfect. It’s not really a seat at all, it’s just a regular toilet lid that has a built-in toddler seat that attaches to the top with a magnet. We’ve had the separate seat and it was disgusting to clean out, and the ones that sit on the toilet end up getting carried around the house. Anyway, I know that’s random in a shower curtain post, but I had to share in case I can save someone else the trouble of buying three different kid potties.

Now onto the reason most of you are here…for 24 other DIY shower curtain ideas and tutorials. So here they are, the links to each blog and tutorial are underneath the photo.      Addicted 2 Decorating Pleated accent shower curtain from Addicted 2 Decorating

Adventures in Dressmaking Waves of ruffles shower curtain from Adventures in Dressmaking

Craftaholics anonymousStriped shower curtain from Craftaholics Anonymous

Decorate with a Little Bit Leftover fabric shower curtain from Decorate With A Little Bit

Design Love Fest Shower curtain embellished with yarn from Design Love Fest About GoodnessLayered shower curtain from About Goodness

Design The Life You Want To Live Throw blanket shower curtain from Design The Life You Want To Live

Dwellings by DeVore Painted Stripe shower curtain from Dwellings By DeVore

Hazardous Design Sheet and trim shower curtain from Hazardous Design

House of SaragerOmbre Ruffled shower curtain (w/DIY dyed fabric) from House of Sarager

Mama Says Sew Flower petal shower curtain from Mama Says Sew

Martha Stewart Color block shower curtain from Martha Stewart

Refresh RestyleStenciled shower curtain from Refresh Restyle

SAS InteriorsCurtain into shower curtain by SAS Interiors

Shabby Love

Dropcloth shower curtain from Shabby Love

Southern Hospitalitymonogrammed ribbon shower curtain from Southern Hospitality

Stop Staring and Start Sewing

Ruffle accent shower curtain from Stop Staring and Start Sewing

Sumos Sweet Stuff Checkered shower curtain from Sumos Sweet Stuff

Taylor Made

Ombre ruffle shower curtain from Taylor Made

The Harpster Home

Black and white striped shower curtains from The Harpster Home

The Ribbon RetreatFabric circles shower curtain from The Ribbon Retreat

The V Spot No sew shower curtain from The V Spot The Wicker HouseShower Curtain made of a bedsheet and a towel from The Wicker House

ThistleWood Farms Sailcloth shower curtain from Thistlewood Farms