this looks beautiful!! honestly tho I just cannot fathom anyone paying even half of that. the used furniture around here does not sell like that. we have many large flea markets in our city and there is nothing priced anywhere near that.. that would sell for $400 in the midwest. been selling restored furniture for two decades.. again its beautiful but this isnt a realistic price.
Why not replace the damaged veneer to be able to stain and refinish the entire piece? This trend of only refinishing the open, easy flat parts, and chalk painting the rest, is getting a little dated. Returning the piece to its original appearance will never go out of style, it just takes more work. Remember, friends don't let friends use bondo and chalk paint.
It was damaged and matching the colors of two different textures flawlessly is nearly impossible. They took a broken dresser that no one wanted and made it useful to someone else. 😊
@@crystal5419 Nobody said no one wanted it 😊 people are so obsessed with the idea that things have to be perfect to be bought or used. There are products that feel like clay that can be sanded down and then stained, it is not exact but it still looks like wood and is mostly unnoticeable. 😊 I’m not saying that what she did now doesn’t look good, not sure why you took it that way. I’m just saying the wood was a beautiful color.
@@spindless sorry I'm not sure I meant to direct my comment specifically to you. I was just reading all the negativity in the comments and wanted to point out that she was working with something that was not easily repaired without covering it completely. I do agree the original wood staining was beautiful. And for my comment that no one wanted it had to do with the previous owner in her area sold it to her for cheap.
The equipment is acquired over time. You start with simpler pieces, sell them & invest some of that profit into the business. Upgrade from a screwdriver to a drill, paintbrushes to paint sprayers. You can tell this is far from their 1st flip, ya gotta trust the process. 😊
The equipment is acquired over time. You start with simpler pieces, sell them & invest some of that profit into the business. Upgrade from a screwdriver to a drill, paintbrushes to paint sprayers. You can tell this is far from their 1st flip, ya gotta trust the process. 😊
this looks beautiful!! honestly tho I just cannot fathom anyone paying even half of that. the used furniture around here does not sell like that. we have many large flea markets in our city and there is nothing priced anywhere near that.. that would sell for $400 in the midwest. been selling restored furniture for two decades.. again its beautiful but this isnt a realistic price.
Doubt this guy is in the Midwest, odds are she's doing this in a major city where I can see this price tag being on the low end.
Absolutely stunning! Love it.
Why not replace the damaged veneer to be able to stain and refinish the entire piece? This trend of only refinishing the open, easy flat parts, and chalk painting the rest, is getting a little dated. Returning the piece to its original appearance will never go out of style, it just takes more work. Remember, friends don't let friends use bondo and chalk paint.
Ain’t nobody buying that for 1300
Heard that
$105 an hour. Good on you.😮❤❤❤🎉🎉
Goddamn that blue settled WAYYYY down once it dried. Looks nice. So did you hand paint all the lips etc because I see that all got paint too.
Beautiful work loved it !!! 💙💐💙💐💙💐💙💐💙
Awesome job!! You nailed it!! ❤
That wood was such a beautiful color 🥲
Was.
@@JP-sx7fq I try not to shit on DIYers/flippers but sometimes it really does bug me how nice the piece was before 😅
It was damaged and matching the colors of two different textures flawlessly is nearly impossible. They took a broken dresser that no one wanted and made it useful to someone else. 😊
@@crystal5419 Nobody said no one wanted it 😊 people are so obsessed with the idea that things have to be perfect to be bought or used. There are products that feel like clay that can be sanded down and then stained, it is not exact but it still looks like wood and is mostly unnoticeable. 😊 I’m not saying that what she did now doesn’t look good, not sure why you took it that way. I’m just saying the wood was a beautiful color.
@@spindless sorry I'm not sure I meant to direct my comment specifically to you. I was just reading all the negativity in the comments and wanted to point out that she was working with something that was not easily repaired without covering it completely. I do agree the original wood staining was beautiful. And for my comment that no one wanted it had to do with the previous owner in her area sold it to her for cheap.
Absolutely beautiful ❤
Klasse 👍👍
What’s the colour name?
where did you order the contact paper? I LOVE the art style!!!!
Stunning
Awesome job & $
Good job! Cant beat those wages...
Worth every cent
IS that dark blue?
❤ that blue
Is that a tent?
Nice
So nice
Nice!
Stunning restore!! 😊🩷👍🏻
That’s ridiculous for anyone to spend that much on a piece of furniture
Niceeeeeeee
That piece did not need that. A hardware change, sure. But not that.
Ya and all the equipment
The equipment is acquired over time. You start with simpler pieces, sell them & invest some of that profit into the business. Upgrade from a screwdriver to a drill, paintbrushes to paint sprayers. You can tell this is far from their 1st flip, ya gotta trust the process. 😊
The equipment is acquired over time. You start with simpler pieces, sell them & invest some of that profit into the business. Upgrade from a screwdriver to a drill, paintbrushes to paint sprayers. You can tell this is far from their 1st flip, ya gotta trust the process. 😊
Here in New Zealand you would not get anywhere near that.
Exemplary🥰
I prefer the touched up Wood.🪵 All that paint will get scratched up more. But it looks nice.
Always blows my mind what people will pay for furniture. $1400 for 1 dresser is just mind boggling to me. It is stunning though🩵