My latest project completed - Mahogany chest of drawers
Hi all, nothing too spectacular but nethertheless, I thought I might as well share this one with any who might be interested.
A good mate of mine, who knows of my love of most things Antique, and that I like restoring things, recently contacted me about a chest of drawers he had for sale. From the photo he sent I couldn't tell if it was mahogany or perhaps cedar.
It is sokid mahogany (not veneer over pine), with English oak secondaries and wide baltic pine backing boards. So it is English, and at a guess given the design, I would think probably dates from around 186-1880ish ???
When I received it, it was pretty badly bleached out on the drawer fronts, the top, and the sides were dryish. The shellac finish definitely was past its use by date and there was no point in trying to revive it using wax or other similar products.
The excellent thing about it was that it is really solid, all the joints are in excellent condition, the feet not loose, and the drawers slide well, even though a couple of the drawer runners are worn.
So, it was a matter of either paint stripping off the old shellac and starting from scratch or alternatively using metho and coarse grade steel wool. I went for the third choice which was to sand it using 120, then 180, 220 and finally 360 grade. Once I was satisfied I had cleaned off all the old shellac but still left enough patina (scratchs, bumps, marks etc), I then applied a mahogany stain thinned out with metho and a little shellac. Once I had the base colour I wished to achieve, I then applied multiple coats of shellac, (allowing to dry off in between), using a pad.
I then rubbed back again with 360, applied a little more of my secret herbs and spices stain mix before yet again more coats of shellac, though slightly thinned down. Finally, I used 0000 grade steel wool and a couple of coats of bees wax polish to finish off.
From my estimation, given I worked on the chest after works at night, instead of watching telly, I think it took around 8 hours to complete, over a couple of weeks. Cost of materials probably somewhere around $15.00. Now given that the chest cost me originally $250, it owes me say (if I count my labour at roughly $20/hr) say around $460, though of course technically only $265.
I am planning on putting the chest up for sale, either through ebay or alternatively the local special antique auctions we have here every few months. I am hoping I can get say $500 or more for it. If so I will be happy. Any thoughts from anyone out there if this seems about right and/or what do you think of the final results. Regrettably I failed to take photos, of it prior to and during its light restoration.