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  • Spruce Up a Chandelier
  • From "DIY Decorating & Design"
    episode DID-142
    advertisement

    Click here to view a larger image.

    An old chandelier such as this one -- with a burnished-brass finish and flowered shades -- is a suitable makeover candidate.

    Click here to view a larger image.

    Spruce up an old chandelier with a few coats of spray paint, accents of dry-brushed acrylic craft paint and new frosted-glass shades.

    Click here to view a larger image.

    Figure A

    Click here to view a larger image.

    Figure B

    If you have an old chandelier that needs a light and bright new look, change its dated appearance with a coat of paint and new glass shades. DIY Decorating & Design host Nancy Golden explains this easy project.


    Materials:


    Steel wool
    Tack cloth
    Painter's tape
    Spray-paint primer for metal
    Spray paint
    Acrylic craft paint in accent color
    Bristle paintbrush
    Glass shades
    Optional: fabric and sewing machine to make fabric covering for chain
    Optional: new ceiling medallion


    1. Remove the chandelier from the ceiling, and remove the light bulbs and glass shades.


    2. Clean the chandelier thoroughly to prepare it for painting. Then rough up the metal surface with steel wool, and wipe clean with a tack cloth. If the chandelier has a metal ceiling canopy you plan to reuse, prep it for painting as well.


    3. Use painter's tape to mask areas of the chandelier that are to remain unpainted.


    4. Spray primer onto the chandelier and metal canopy and let dry.


    5. Spray on the top coat.


    6. When the paint is dry, dry-brush the accent color on the chandelier and metal canopy to give them an interesting aged look. Nancy applied coppery-gold acrylic paint to the chandelier and canopy with a bristle brush (figure A).


    7. Set the new glass shades in place on the chandelier.


    8. If desired, make a gathered fabric covering for the chandelier chain or cord. Stitch a narrow fabric tube twice the length of the chandelier chain, and slip it on over the chain.


    9. Consider replacing the ceiling canopy with a rich-looking ceiling medallion, painted or stained to match the updated chandelier (figure B).

  • ALSO IN THIS EPISODE: