Please be reseated: table top-upby Catherine Doherty
Every cottage needs a functional table: one that can be cozied up to on a quiet morning to do a crossword puzzle, used for euchre on a rainy afternoon, then loaded with food for an impromptu dinner with neighbours – a table that works as easily outdoors as it does in a screened porch. That table (or at least the guts of it) may be under your nose. Wrought-iron furniture from the ’70s, usually featuring a glass tabletop and uncomfortable upholstered chairs, can be salvaged anywhere from garage sales to roadsides. We found ours in a cottager’s basement and, with a little elbow grease and some deck and fence boards, it was updated to low-maintenance seating that looks great. Adapt our instructions to the size and design of your table.
Step 1Clean and sand the iron bases of the table and chairs, then evenly coat with rust paint. (You may need two coats to cover the old colour.) We painted ours with Tremclad Rust Paint in Brown, a rich, chocolate colour.
Step 2Cut the pieces for the tabletop: b) Rip 2"-wide pieces from your deck boards for the breadboard ends. Step 3Assemble tabletop: b) With a 3⁄8" bit, drill 1⁄2"-deep countersink holes in the outside face of the breadboard pieces, allowing 2 screws per board. (Cedar is so soft, you don’t need to drill pilot holes through the ends into the boards.) Glue and screw with 3" deck screws, and let dry. Coat the wood plugs with glue and tap them in place. When the glue has dried, cut them flush. c) Sand tabletop.
Step 4Cut the pieces for the chairs: b) Cut the fence boards to match the width. We also ripped ours to about 21⁄2" to make narrower slats. c) From your fence boards, rip two 1" battens for the underside of each seat. Space out the seat slats, bottom side up, using same size of spacer as your tabletop and align the batten along each side. Glue and screw the battens to the seat bottom using 1⁄2" deck screws. Allow glue to dry. d) Sand chair tops. Step 5Apply weatherproof stain. We used Sikkens Cetol 1 in Natural, a warm orange. Step 6Screw tabletop and chair tops to the wrought-iron bases using original holes in the frame.
Published in the June 2004 issue of Cottage Life magazine. Copyright © 2004 by Cottage Life. All rights reserved. Reproduction of any article, photograph, or artwork, for other than personal use, in whole or in part, without the written permission of the publisher is strictly forbidden. |
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