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Thread: 1930's Art Deco Kitchen Dresser
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16th February 2013, 01:55 PM #1
1930's Art Deco Kitchen Dresser
An actual restoration this time ....
A 1930's kitchen dresser. Painted in a lovely distressed mustard and olive theme.
Don't know how long ago it was painted, but it should have done a good job protecting the timbers underneath
This is how it arrived.
The first thing was to remove the lead light glass from the frames and put them in storage to protect them.
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This is what I'm hoping it will look like when I'm finished.
Reference photos from the Manly Antique centre.
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I need to do all the normal restoration things.
Replace drawer runners, scrape and wash the paint off, replace the modern drawer pulls (photo shows the imprint of the original pulls),
polish everything, replace some of the cane moldings, and patch a bit of veneer on the round sides.
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Luckily the paint was water based and it scrapes and washes off pretty easily.
I have all the doors and cabinet hardware removed for cleaning.
There's some nice walnut veneer under the paint.
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Cleaning one of the doors.
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A before and after on one of the doors.
There's a lot of original polish on the woodwork. This will make the French polishing a fair bit easier.
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I found this lining one of the shelves.
Hand painted lino
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It's been well used. You can even tell which slot the knives, forks and spoons were kept in the cutlery drawer by the wear on the back of the drawer.
Art Deco is not really my thing, but I'm sure there'll be some fun moments (or not).
I'll post some more photos if anything interesting happens.
Cheers all,
Stu
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16th February 2013, 03:54 PM #2
What a great find. Look forward to seeing the restoration.
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16th February 2013, 03:59 PM #3
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16th February 2013, 07:55 PM #4SENIOR MEMBER
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- Dec 2010
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- Melbourne
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That should look great when done,have one similar done up years ago,any idea how much it would sell for after you have finished it?
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16th February 2013, 08:15 PM #5
I'm restoring this dresser for a friend. It's been in the family since new, so it has a lot of sentimental value.
Kitchen dressers are actually quite useful, so there is some demand I expect.
The complete one in the pictures had a price of $850. This was from an antique shop.
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17th February 2013, 05:56 PM #6Skwair2rownd
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Greyt stuphph Thumbthumper!!!
I wonder how much of that beautiful old style has been painted, modified,
or just thrown out??
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22nd February 2013, 06:27 PM #7
The paint's all gone now. It'll need a good scrub to get the last little flecks out of the veneer grain.
These photos are the progress shots.
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I've started to polish the doors. It's good thing to do when you have a moment during the day.
Before and after the first coat.
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I've ordered some split cane that is used for moldings, and I have my eye on some deco drawer pulls on a couple of different websites.
After I finish scrubbing the whole thing down to get as much of the paint out of the grain as possible, I'll start patching a few spots in the veneer. I'll try to post some WIP on that job.
Cheers all ...
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23rd February 2013, 12:16 PM #8Skwair2rownd
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- Nov 2007
- Location
- Dundowran Beach
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- 77
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- 0
It's just such a pleasure to see this being brought back to life!!
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3rd March 2013, 02:58 PM #9
Spent some time in the shed doing some fiddly bits.
Cleaning the hinges and screws. I used a soft brass wire wheel in the drill press.
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I ordered some split cane from a mob in QLD to replace the old broken and missing moldings.
Here I am planing the back of the cane to get it nice and flat, I will need to sand the skin and leaf nodes off and stain them a Walnut colour before replacing.
This is how they were originally done.
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Some of the veneer problem areas.
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My 'library' of Walnut veneer pieces.
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First pic is the cleanout of a veneer ding. I then take a rubbing of the area using masking tape.
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Stick the rubbing to a matching piece of veneer and cut out with a scalpel.
You'll usually need to tweak the size of the patch with some sandpaper.
I then hinge it with masking tape.
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I use hide glue and saturate the whole patch (back and front) and press in.
Because it's a curved surface, I use dressmakers pins to secure the patch. It's a bit hard to clamp as you would with a flat surface.
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When it dries, I'll sand it flush with fine paper and add a touch of stain if required.
Back to the shed now to sand split cane
Cheers all ...
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5th March 2013, 12:53 PM #10Senior Member
- Join Date
- Apr 2012
- Location
- Brisbane
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- 177
Great to see the level of work you're going to on this. I'm particularly interested in your approach with the veneer 'dings' and using a rubbing etc. I have an early 1900's desk I should start on sometime which will need some veneer repairs. Looking forward to seeing your progress! Lawry
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10th March 2013, 02:48 PM #11
Some more progress shots.
Here's the cutlery drawer.
It did have remnants of felt stuck to the drawer bottom, but here I've used a cotton drill stuck down with hide glue. I haven't nailed in the bottom yet (slipped in for the pic) as I want to wait until I install the handles (which are now in transit). This just saves cleaning if I have to re-drill the drawer fronts.
The hide glue, when made a bit thicker doesn't seem to soak into the material. In my old piano technician days, we always used hide glue for the doeskins and felts so that they didn't harden.
I love the way you can see the wear of the cutlery at the back of the drawer. Knives on the left, forks in the centre and spoons on the right.
I could have replaced the dividers as they were pretty smashed up, but I ended up repairing the originals. Glueing, clamping, cleaning.
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All the doors are now finished.
I had intended to just rag on a finish, but I ended up french polishing the Walnut panels, and just rubbing the frames with the BLO/shellac mix.
Finished with a hard wax and buffed.
The push catches are not original I believe, but they've been there quite a while and they suit the style. I'm not sure I'd be able to source originals.
Thankfully, all the hinges are definitely original and in good condition.
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The first coat of neat shellac on the veneered side. This side didn't need patching.
The other side still has some veneer repairs to do.
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I can actually see light at the end of the tunnel now
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10th March 2013, 03:22 PM #12
Looking great Stu. One of the nicest dressers I have seen. Well worth restoring.
Those were the droids I was looking for.
https://autoblastgates.com.au
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13th March 2013, 06:59 PM #13
The veneer patching is all done ...
The nasty hole at the bottom of the right side was a challenge.
I used a Dremel to cut the ragged base plywood into a somewhat neat hole.
I trimmed and cleaned the walnut veneer ready for the patch.
I glued in a fairly thick piece of veneer (cedar) to use as a backing.
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I used a contour gauge to replicate the arc, band sawed a scrap piece of pine, and then trimmed it down and glued it in.
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Patched and pinned...
It looks a bit redder than the original walnut, but I'll blend with oxides/stain.
It actually looks very close when wet down.
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Another patch done...
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The new (old) handles arrived from the big auction site in the sky.
Original 1930's.
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This is one of the old handles in situ. Made by Turner Australia.
These would have been added in the 60's. Turner was bought out by Stanley around 1970.
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Better ?
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Next job is to shellac the right side, top, and rails and replace the inner case drawer runners.
Then it's time to polish, polish, polish
soon
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13th March 2013, 07:07 PM #14
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13th March 2013, 07:24 PM #15
I think so.
I spent a lot of time looking around the world for suitable handles. I was never going to find handles that fitted the imprints perfectly.
Original 1930's, great design, and very complimentary. The auction was for a total of 3 at a reasonable price
I'm hoping the owner will be happy with them.
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