If you are new here, stick around- you won’t be sorry! Shannon is a charmer with a ton of tricks up her sleeve, she knows what a budget is, and her camerawork makes it feel like you’re right there with her. I love this channel. (Bronze, BTW 😊)
First time watcher here. It was like watching Bob Ross... each time he added a little tree here and a little tree there I thought to myself... but why, Bob? It looked great already. But, like these cabinets, each time I thought it was done ...what you would do next was even greater ! So pretty.
After watching your previous video tutorial on this finish for furniture I tried it and really liked it. I also ended up painting my oak bathroom cabinets in just Rugged Tan with black cabinet pulls and I love it. Thank you for showing us this!
wow! what a beautiful transformation! the extra touch with following the wood grain really elevates the result. i love both looks, but i think the brass knobs warm it up so beautifully. fabulous! thanks for sharing your process here 💗
This turned out so beautiful! I actually loved it more before the dry brushing. I’ve been thinking about learning how to refinish and update my furniture so this was inspiring but also a little intimidating.
My mom loved these types of succulents. She would use little dishes from a thrift store. Those little pods you knocked off to have a longer stem, she would have pushed the slightest bit in the soil - they grow as is!
I think this it beautiful 😍 Although I personally couldn’t do all the cabinets in my kitchen like this lol I’d have one cabinet finished and that’s it 😂
I am obsessed with warm tan colors lately. This color reminds me of sandy beaches. Like Dixie bell burlap. Waverly’s hazelnut, but I mix it with white to lighten it. I’ve been using a lot of Dixie bells. Au naturale voodoo stain, i’ve been using it over painted surfaces to give it that warm orangey hue. Not the 80s orange, but tan with a kiss of orange.
Bronze.... and this just answered a question that I had. I wanted to know if I could paint on top of the glaze. And you just did it!!!! Thanks so much for this video !!!!!!!
Hi, I'd really love to try this potter barn look on my kitchen cabinets. The color of my cabinets is currently the old time Pickled, so I am already starting close to the Rugged Tan as a base. Could I possibly skip priming & painting the base color and after deglossing go right to decorative glaze with poly over it???
Have you tried it yet? I want to do this as well but i’m so scared it won’t look good. I was wondering if I will just take some washable white poster paint & put it on the cupboards to get an idea of what it would look like.
Wow. It took so so long. I think I would rather do the wood bleach. So much less time and like 3 steps. No paint . No mess ups. It looks pretty good 👍🏼 way to go
Each of those little leaves you knocked off the Burro’s Tail can grow a whole new plant!! Most succulents can be rooted and grown from a single leaf or bean, just put them on top of the soil, and mist them daily to keep moist💚💚
Girl! I love watching you paint!! I want to do something similar on my kitchen cabinets but wasn’t looking forward to the dust. So I will try the liquid method to remove the finish. I liked the black knobs but the bronze looks good as well. I wasn’t a fan of the square look but I love the color. Excellent job!
There really is no fast way to do your kitchen cabinets right. You would usually clean it well with a solvent first to get the grease off, then sand it to give the surface a more even finish before staining or painting. Anything quick is going to be a complete hackjob, something a flipper would do before selling a house because they dont care if it actually lasts. Im not really sold on doing it the way you see in this video either though.
I would love to use this technique to do my kitchen cabs, however, this means I would have to do my mantle and my stair handrail. The stairs scare me a bit! It was so hard to figure out the color for the decorative glaze. Java Brown. Is not listed on the materials used.
Bronze! Awesome job once again! I love doing this technique. You were saying that you can go over this type of finish over time. I did this with my kitchen table top about a year or 2 ago. What can I do to fix some scratched area? Caused by my kitties. Lol
Hi Shannon. Thanks for this great video, it is very useful. I would like to do this WOOD LIKE finish Pottery Barn OAK but in a soft sage green color on a table. What would I do differently?
Great video! I didn’t notice if you recommended thorough cleaning before priming. You might not have to sand but if not cleaned thoroughly, anything applied is not going to stick long term.
Great point, esp for kitchen cabinets. She did mention cleaning with soap and water at the very beginning, but I know some kitchen cabinets can have grease build up over the years. I wonder if original Krud Kutter would be too harsh?
@@jewelbug8713 Krud cutter works well but I use TSP for the best results. But you really have to rinse well. The top reason most DIY paint jobs don't last is inadequate prep.
I'm working on my bathroom vanity right now (with this videos finish)..... wish me luck! Would love to have on the side bar, amount of time (aprox of course) when using the same products.
Notes for anyone starting this project. After sanding. Stix takes 4 hours to dry. Benjamin Moores Advance Paint take 14 hour for next coat (2 weeks to fully cure), make note to not take long hot showers/bath during those 14 days. As it will make the paint "sweat". I'm on to my next glaze step now.....
I love your faux painting. But I think these would’ve been a perfect candidate for a cerused oak finish. Which is more like the Restoration Hardware or Arhaus finishes. You sand the wood and then wire brush the oak grain. Then you layer a primer or paint or some just use the original stain or stain in a new color and then use a glaze or paint or wax to get into the grain. It creates a dimensional piece. I wood love to see you do that finish pretty please. 😊
I was thinking of doing some more testing on this oak server, I bought a few stains to try but didn’t love any of them so I will keep tinkering. Do you have to sand the clear finish off completely to ceruse?
I considered cerusing my golden oak kitchen cabinets but now feel the look would clash too much with my travertine tiled floor. I did ceruse a vanity and mirror in a half bath that I absolutely loved but being a novice (unfortunately) applied urethane topcoat which yellowed the finish horribly in just a few months (it was a white primer with antique glaze). A new technique suggests a water-based topcoat, but that also may amber over time with white based paints.
@@blacksheephouse sorry I guess I never answered. Yes, you have to completely sand off clear coat and then use a wire brush to dig out the soft grain. There’s a few examples here in TH-cam. If I find a good one I will put the channel in here.
Is there a TH-cam video with this process that you know about? I have the same problem as jewelbug with a dark stone floor. I would actually just want to take the gloss off my cupboards and just add a wax or a light matt sealer, but I don’t know much about doing this, only just started to look into it.
How did you know to make this project? I literally spent this week looking up this style for our 40yr old kitchen cabinets! Similar style but full rectangle without the arch. I would like to see whatever other colors you could come up with and maybe some suggested color pairings for this style and solid colored cabinets (two-tone?).
Love this!!! I’m trying to get kitchen makeover ideas. What would you guys recommend for painting over wood paneling in a kitchen with this style cabinets? It’s a very old house 😅
i have a WORKING farm kitchen; kids, dogs, orphan baby livestock, steel toe boots. Which,in your experience/opinion might survive best: bm advance, general finishes or valspar. thinking gray, darker on bottoms. have you ever tried cerusing? Thank you for sharing REALISTIC diy!
Greetings from the UK, have you tried the linen look paint effect, may I ask if you could do a tutorial please. Thank you again for sharing your expertise.
I’d love to see how this pairs with Saltillo tile flooring. I’d like to do this finish in my kitchen, but I’m not sure if it would be too pink and if I’d need a different base color.
For an entire kitchen I can imagine that would be mega expensive for hand painted custom multiple steps!!!! I wish you were here to do it to mine cas I’d pay ya lol
It’s a New Year and I’m ready to update my cherry color wall unit. Someone told me they used a liquid sandpape. I found you and you make it look so easy. I’ve painted my fireplace in 45 min and it turned out great! Even friends have ask me to do theirs but no way will I do that . But, I’m gonna watch more of your videos and one question I do have is about colors to use? I wanted to go more white like my white wood plantation shutters. What colors would you use for white there are so many? And… Since I’m not doing kitchen cabinets should I use a different type liquid sandpaper on my wall unit ? Any help would be appreciated . Thank you. Linda in Pensacola,Fl
Heyyyy!!! I just found your channel and i think it's very helpful for a beginner to start experimenting! I'm from Greece and i understand pretty much everything you say.. Although i have a question... Is this chalk paint? And if not, could jt be done with chalk paint?
Do you have a picture of the finished project . I’m considering doing my kitchen cabinets but I want to see it in a whole kitchen to make sure I like it on that grand of a scale .
I have a question about the glazing the center and sides with the grain. So do you first apply glaze side to side and then go back to those section? wasn't sure if you did this all in one step by taping off the areas you wanted to glaze up and down and glaze them later after the side to side areas dryed? By the way love your e book!! Thanks
Hey! I have a video coming out Tuesday 10/22/24 showing how I do it w/o tape but with tape just pick the ups and downs or side to sides and do all of them and then the other after your first ones are dry but be careful because the tape can pull up your finish so sometimes I just tape the first round and then I free hand the 2nd. Hope that makes sense, but check out the video coming next week too for visuals!
I’ve watched all your videos on this technique and really been wanting to try it on an old maple vanity so thanks for showing it on a cabinet. What color is the glaze that you used here? I looked up rust oleum decorative glaze but seems to be color options. Thanks
Normally I’d spray cabinets but for our master bdr remodel , I’m going to try this technique. What are your thoughts on using Bin Zinsser Shellac Primer and Sherwin Williams Emerald Urethane Semi Gloss Paint as that is usually my go to for cabinets?
I would love to see an ivory color paint with glaze on drawers and this rugged tan color maybe on top. Two toned dresser. I have a bed and dresser that that needs to be done.
For advance I wait a day and then for the glaze I wait another day or 2 *but* sometimes if weather is damp I have to wait more days on the glaze. A fan does help!
Hi Shannon! Would you do this painting technique on wrapped support beams? I have a support beam and post in my downstairs family room stained in a dark chestnut and the previous family scribbled and marked up the post so I had to fill in lots of damaged areas and calked the gaps in the trim used on the edges. I don’t think re-staining will be an option as a result so painting it white or a neutral color is my only other option unless you think this technique would work on it? Also, would you still use the matte sealer? Thanks
This technique would definitely work on a beam! I do use the dog brush when I want more contrast or need to wipe away more glaze but it’s not always necessary
All those bits you popped off the plants, you could've put them in your planters too and would get tons of new babies from each one. I buy and sell plants on eBay too among tons of other things 😊
If you are new here, stick around- you won’t be sorry! Shannon is a charmer with a ton of tricks up her sleeve, she knows what a budget is, and her camerawork makes it feel like you’re right there with her. I love this channel.
(Bronze, BTW 😊)
First time watcher here. It was like watching Bob Ross... each time he added a little tree here and a little tree there I thought to myself... but why, Bob? It looked great already. But, like these cabinets, each time I thought it was done ...what you would do next was even greater ! So pretty.
the bronze! round and bronze is perfect for this finish! Great job on the cabinets!!! i wish i could see how it looked on the whole kitchen!!!
I really enjoyed watching you do the Pottery Brand look. You make it look so easy.
Beautiful work! I love the bronze knob and I actually love the original knob on the right door too!
Hi, wht color glaze did you use ?
After watching your previous video tutorial on this finish for furniture I tried it and really liked it. I also ended up painting my oak bathroom cabinets in just Rugged Tan with black cabinet pulls and I love it. Thank you for showing us this!
wow! what a beautiful transformation! the extra touch with following the wood grain really elevates the result. i love both looks, but i think the brass knobs warm it up so beautifully. fabulous! thanks for sharing your process here 💗
would love to see RH antiqued grey oak finish like this !!! love ur work !
I am so happy I found your channel! I’m obsessed with black oak, and I would love to see how you’d achieve that grain-like finish in black.
This turned out so beautiful! I actually loved it more before the dry brushing. I’ve been thinking about learning how to refinish and update my furniture so this was inspiring but also a little intimidating.
My mom loved these types of succulents. She would use little dishes from a thrift store. Those little pods you knocked off to have a longer stem, she would have pushed the slightest bit in the soil - they grow as is!
I think this it beautiful 😍 Although I personally couldn’t do all the cabinets in my kitchen like this lol I’d have one cabinet finished and that’s it 😂
I am obsessed with warm tan colors lately. This color reminds me of sandy beaches. Like Dixie bell burlap. Waverly’s hazelnut, but I mix it with white to lighten it.
I’ve been using a lot of Dixie bells. Au naturale voodoo stain, i’ve been using it over painted surfaces to give it that warm orangey hue.
Not the 80s orange, but tan with a kiss of orange.
Future tutorial would love to see an Acacia or Mango wood look that seems to be on a lot of HomeGoods and Marshalls shelves and cabinets these days ❤❤
Bronze.... and this just answered a question that I had. I wanted to know if I could paint on top of the glaze. And you just did it!!!! Thanks so much for this video !!!!!!!
You're the best, most modern guide to getting new looks!!!
I’m so over both golden oak and white! Love this alternative!
Oh! What I saw you do on just one door was amazing! Cant wait to see more. Linda from Pensacola, Fl
Hi, I'd really love to try this potter barn look on my kitchen cabinets. The color of my cabinets is currently the old time Pickled, so I am already starting close to the Rugged Tan as a base. Could I possibly skip priming & painting the base color and after deglossing go right to decorative glaze with poly over it???
These are absolutely beautiful, I definitely agree with the bronze. I want to do the same thing, but with like a grayish blue color.
Definitely bronze and OMG I've been wanting to paint my kitchen cupboards but cannot decide what color. I think you just helped me solve my dilemma 💖
Beautiful! I would choose the bronze knobs! Thanks so much for sharing
A great result again Shannon. bronze knob looks best.
That was a great video, so cool how you made that look. I personally liked option #2 for the knobs.
Thanks for explaining why you weren't following the grain. Nice result!
Definitely the bronze knobs.. Great tutorial Thanks for sharing ❤
Thank you! Just moved in and have the very same cabinets. Yours look great!
This is one of my favorites finishes you do, and yesss to the bronze knobs 👌
Thank you Ninna! Always happy to see your comment pop up ✨ 🌟
Bronze for sure! Nice job! I’d love to see something in the gray colors.
This is beautiful! I have orange-toned 90's cabinets that are laminate. I will have to watch you do more before I get brave enough to try!
Have you tried it yet? I want to do this as well but i’m so scared it won’t look good. I was wondering if I will just take some washable white poster paint & put it on the cupboards to get an idea of what it would look like.
Wow. It took so so long. I think I would rather do the wood bleach. So much less time and like 3 steps. No paint . No mess ups. It looks pretty good 👍🏼 way to go
I admire your patience 😌 x
Bronze knob looks way better then the black knob. Great job!
Yes, definately the bronze. I love your channel with all your tips and tricks 👍😎🐕🦺
Love this work as always. Doing a set of nightstands in this look. Brass knob. Always. ❤
Each of those little leaves you knocked off the Burro’s Tail can grow a whole new plant!! Most succulents can be rooted and grown from a single leaf or bean, just put them on top of the soil, and mist them daily to keep moist💚💚
Girl! I love watching you paint!! I want to do something similar on my kitchen cabinets but wasn’t looking forward to the dust. So I will try the liquid method to remove the finish. I liked the black knobs but the bronze looks good as well. I wasn’t a fan of the square look but I love the color. Excellent job!
It looks really good, hope it held up well.
How well does this finish. Hold up on kitchen cabinets over time and use plz. Looks great. I like the. Bronze knows best. Thank u
looks like it would take a whole day to do a single door
There really is no fast way to do your kitchen cabinets right. You would usually clean it well with a solvent first to get the grease off, then sand it to give the surface a more even finish before staining or painting. Anything quick is going to be a complete hackjob, something a flipper would do before selling a house because they dont care if it actually lasts. Im not really sold on doing it the way you see in this video either though.
@@Inbal_Feuchtwanger I get you don't want to rush this type of job but this method would take FOREVER to do the entire kitchen.
I would love to use this technique to do my kitchen cabs, however, this means I would have to do my mantle and my stair handrail. The stairs scare me a bit!
It was so hard to figure out the color for the decorative glaze.
Java Brown. Is not listed on the materials used.
Love the final result but I would think one would need an oil based primer so as to prevent the original stain color leaking through?
Bronze! Awesome job once again! I love doing this technique. You were saying that you can go over this type of finish over time. I did this with my kitchen table top about a year or 2 ago. What can I do to fix some scratched area? Caused by my kitties. Lol
Lovely work, I live in NJ and love doing this kind of design too, in big furniture I like adding sparkle accents with a stencil
Holy cow that looks so high end. . And what's that color it s like creamy sandy greige. Gorgeous.
Bronze for sure! Thank you for the great tutorial!!
Been looking for a faux pickeled look, this gives me ideas. Thank you
Absolutely gorgeous! I love your style!❤
Hi Shannon. Thanks for this great video, it is very useful. I would like to do this WOOD LIKE finish Pottery Barn OAK but in a soft sage green color on a table. What would I do differently?
Great video! I didn’t notice if you recommended thorough cleaning before priming. You might not have to sand but if not cleaned thoroughly, anything applied is not going to stick long term.
Great point, esp for kitchen cabinets. She did mention cleaning with soap and water at the very beginning, but I know some kitchen cabinets can have grease build up over the years. I wonder if original Krud Kutter would be too harsh?
@@jewelbug8713 Krud cutter works well but I use TSP for the best results. But you really have to rinse well. The top reason most DIY paint jobs don't last is inadequate prep.
I found your channel by accident, but I subscribed! I'm hooked!
Welcome aboard!!
Beautiful job! Thanks for the easy tutorial!!!!
Love this and your tutorials so much! 🔥👏🔥👏🔥 Bronze knob for sure. Would you use BM Advance on a kitchen table?
Future tutorial: French Oak
Definitely brass. Love your videos, thank you so sharing.
I'm working on my bathroom vanity right now (with this videos finish)..... wish me luck! Would love to have on the side bar, amount of time (aprox of course) when using the same products.
Notes for anyone starting this project. After sanding. Stix takes 4 hours to dry. Benjamin Moores Advance Paint take 14 hour for next coat (2 weeks to fully cure), make note to not take long hot showers/bath during those 14 days. As it will make the paint "sweat". I'm on to my next glaze step now.....
@@dialindsey Very helpful, thank-you.
Black oak at Potterybarn is gorgeous, would love to see how that can be done.
I love your faux painting. But I think these would’ve been a perfect candidate for a cerused oak finish. Which is more like the Restoration Hardware or Arhaus finishes. You sand the wood and then wire brush the oak grain. Then you layer a primer or paint or some just use the original stain or stain in a new color and then use a glaze or paint or wax to get into the grain. It creates a dimensional piece. I wood love to see you do that finish pretty please. 😊
I was thinking of doing some more testing on this oak server, I bought a few stains to try but didn’t love any of them so I will keep tinkering. Do you have to sand the clear finish off completely to ceruse?
@@blacksheephouse th-cam.com/video/JnBnfXEZUB4/w-d-xo.html. Wes does several videos about ceruse
I considered cerusing my golden oak kitchen cabinets but now feel the look would clash too much with my travertine tiled floor. I did ceruse a vanity and mirror in a half bath that I absolutely loved but being a novice (unfortunately) applied urethane topcoat which yellowed the finish horribly in just a few months (it was a white primer with antique glaze). A new technique suggests a water-based topcoat, but that also may amber over time with white based paints.
@@blacksheephouse sorry I guess I never answered. Yes, you have to completely sand off clear coat and then use a wire brush to dig out the soft grain. There’s a few examples here in TH-cam. If I find a good one I will put the channel in here.
Is there a TH-cam video with this process that you know about? I have the same problem as jewelbug with a dark stone floor. I would actually just want to take the gloss off my cupboards and just add a wax or a light matt sealer, but I don’t know much about doing this, only just started to look into it.
Great job as always 👏. Love your channel ❤️
How did you know to make this project? I literally spent this week looking up this style for our 40yr old kitchen cabinets! Similar style but full rectangle without the arch. I would like to see whatever other colors you could come up with and maybe some suggested color pairings for this style and solid colored cabinets (two-tone?).
Love this!!! I’m trying to get kitchen makeover ideas. What would you guys recommend for painting over wood paneling in a kitchen with this style cabinets? It’s a very old house 😅
Oh I just love this with the bronze hardware!
Will this work on mobile home cabinets that has the faux paper wood look?
I love this painting technique!
Love it. And yes the bronze knob.
i have a WORKING farm kitchen; kids, dogs, orphan baby livestock, steel toe boots. Which,in your experience/opinion might survive best: bm advance, general finishes or valspar. thinking gray, darker on bottoms. have you ever tried cerusing? Thank you for sharing REALISTIC diy!
I am wondering what color you have for countertops that would go with the cupboards? I luv this.
Greetings from the UK, have you tried the linen look paint effect, may I ask if you could do a tutorial please. Thank you again for sharing your expertise.
I am working on that exact tutorial this week so stay tuned and look for it next week 💕
Thanks!
Thank you!
I’d love to see how this pairs with Saltillo tile flooring. I’d like to do this finish in my kitchen, but I’m not sure if it would be too pink and if I’d need a different base color.
For an entire kitchen I can imagine that would be mega expensive for hand painted custom multiple steps!!!! I wish you were here to do it to mine cas I’d pay ya lol
It’s a New Year and I’m ready to update my cherry color wall unit. Someone told me they used a liquid sandpape. I found you and you make it look so easy. I’ve painted my fireplace in 45 min and it turned out great! Even friends have ask me to do theirs but no way will I do that . But, I’m gonna watch more of your videos and one question I do have is about colors to use? I wanted to go more white like my white wood plantation shutters. What colors would you use for white there are so many? And… Since I’m not doing kitchen cabinets should I use a different type liquid sandpaper on my wall unit ? Any help would be appreciated . Thank you. Linda in Pensacola,Fl
Heyyyy!!! I just found your channel and i think it's very helpful for a beginner to start experimenting! I'm from Greece and i understand pretty much everything you say.. Although i have a question... Is this chalk paint? And if not, could jt be done with chalk paint?
Absolutely Beautiful 😍
Do you have a picture of the finished project . I’m considering doing my kitchen cabinets but I want to see it in a whole kitchen to make sure I like it on that grand of a scale .
I like the technique. I prefer the bronze knobs, or black if they were round.
Bronze knob.
Great job as always!!!
I have a question about the glazing the center and sides with the grain. So do you first apply glaze side to side and then go back to those section? wasn't sure if you did this all in one step by taping off the areas you wanted to glaze up and down and glaze them later after the side to side areas dryed? By the way love your e book!! Thanks
Hey! I have a video coming out Tuesday 10/22/24 showing how I do it w/o tape but with tape just pick the ups and downs or side to sides and do all of them and then the other after your first ones are dry but be careful because the tape can pull up your finish so sometimes I just tape the first round and then I free hand the 2nd. Hope that makes sense, but check out the video coming next week too for visuals!
@@blacksheephouse Sounds great, I look forward to your videos always so helpful!!!
The bronze... and wonderful video!
Bronze knob!! Love this video! Thank you!!
I’ve watched all your videos on this technique and really been wanting to try it on an old maple vanity so thanks for showing it on a cabinet. What color is the glaze that you used here? I looked up rust oleum decorative glaze but seems to be color options. Thanks
Would love to see the whole project completed too!
She's still on door 2.
Bronze round knobs! Thanks for the tutorial!
This is like my cabinet! Thanks so much!
Lovin’ this look! Thanks!
That is so pretty!
BRONZE!!! Gorgeous!
I would love to see how do do a more blonde finish!!
Thank you for the 2:13 Great video 🙏
What color are the base paint
And also glaze color ?
Java brown
This is Awesome! I love your work. Will this work if you’ve already applied Gel Finish to your cabinets? And do you have to remove the doors?
Hi I love this so much, did you let the paint dry before adding the glaze?
I love the black color but the shape of the round bronze knobs!
Normally I’d spray cabinets but for our master bdr remodel , I’m going to try this technique. What are your thoughts on using Bin Zinsser Shellac Primer and Sherwin Williams Emerald Urethane Semi Gloss Paint as that is usually my go to for cabinets?
That's a timeless combo!
Can you go back after it’s dry but before topcoat and apply more glaze and brush it again? I have some spots that are too bare.
I would love to see an ivory color paint with glaze on drawers and this rugged tan color maybe on top. Two toned dresser. I have a bed and dresser that that needs to be done.
What are the dry times for the advance before you can put the glaze over it? And then what is the dry time for the glaze before adding a top coat?
For advance I wait a day and then for the glaze I wait another day or 2 *but* sometimes if weather is damp I have to wait more days on the glaze. A fan does help!
Hi Shannon! Would you do this painting technique on wrapped support beams? I have a support beam and post in my downstairs family room stained in a dark chestnut and the previous family scribbled and marked up the post so I had to fill in lots of damaged areas and calked the gaps in the trim used on the edges. I don’t think re-staining will be an option as a result so painting it white or a neutral color is my only other option unless you think this technique would work on it? Also, would you still use the matte sealer? Thanks
This technique would definitely work on a beam! I do use the dog brush when I want more contrast or need to wipe away more glaze but it’s not always necessary
@@blacksheephouse oh awesome! What about the matte sealer? Do you think it will be needed?
Do you paint the other side of the doors also?
I would love yo see old orangey oak cabinets changed to white with no sanding nor removing doors.
Bleach? Or what about priming, then chalk paint and seal with PU?
All those bits you popped off the plants, you could've put them in your planters too and would get tons of new babies from each one. I buy and sell plants on eBay too among tons of other things 😊
Such a great result! New sub :)
How much time in between steps? Like the paint to glaze and glaze to top coat?