Distressed Furniture, Part 1

July 1st, 2008  |  Published in decor, furniture  |  2 Comments

Take a spin along a country road in summertime and you’re bound to come across antique furniture for sale—or, in some cases, antique-like furniture: purposely distressed dressers, tables, kitchen cabinets, doors that are made to look used and abused. Antique table and globe

Distressed furniture, whether real or faked, carries a feeling of warmth into any room, used sparingly of course; too much and your house becomes a mismatched auctioneer’s room or, worse, a set from Little House on the Prairie.

Having one or two pieces of distressed furniture in an otherwise modernized room creates great contrast and dramatic effect, showcasing the antique object, whether real or faked, as the room’s focal point. A distressed dining room table looks especially striking amidst sleek flooring and furniture; the minimalism of the modern surfaces allows the knotty, pocked-looking tabletop to shine through.

Of course, adding distressed furniture doesn’t begin and end with movable furniture like tables, cabinets and hutches. Equally effective: lining a wall with barn boards or using the boards as trim around a window frame, putting down barn board flooring, or installing a distressed wooden beam that spans an entire room. Barnboard

Up next: making your own distressed furniture. Why pay for someone else’s old or old-looking furniture when you can make your own?

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Responses

  1. Home renovations Texas says:

    July 1st, 2008 at 3:15 pm (#)

    theres something with the “distressed look” in furnitures that i also like.

  2. David Miller says:

    July 11th, 2008 at 10:55 am (#)

    I have learned a lot about this, particularly from shows like the Antiques Roadshow. I guess if someone has to push it and advertise it as an antique, one should be wary. It is very difficult to find genuine things of value these days. Nice post and photos, thanks.

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