It's a brown-stained, bar-height table with a built-in retractable leaf which extends the tabletop out into a full square. I've actually had three tables exactly like this in my life, so when I saw this I was like, "Hello, old friend!" The finish isn't in the greatest shape, but I was planning on painting it anyway.
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| Primer |
The first thing I did was cut 6” off the legs to make this a normal-height dining room table (30"). Next I gave the entire table a thorough sanding - not to remove the finish entirely, just to eliminate any protective topcoat that would keep paint from adhering, and to smooth out dings and scratches in the top surface.
For the priming coat (above) I mixed half and half Killz primer with some of the gray paint leftover from the paint job in Roommate's bedroom (done before we moved in - Previous Tenant left us all her old paint). This gave me a tinted half-primer to use that was dark enough for the black to go over with no problem, and it used up some paint I didn't want.
For $40 and a little elbow grease, we now have a place to work on craft projects, cut out fabric, and serve guests at our annual Halloween party. I suppose we could even eat at it, like normal people, if we wanted (wait what?)
You know what you don't see in any of these pictures? Chairs. I've got one old Ikea Kaustby (discontinued), but a dining room table needs more than one chair. Fortunately, I found one on bulk day this year that just needs to be fixed up. I'm on the hunt for a couple more.


