I mentioned a couple weeks ago that I would be receiving some furniture from my dad and stepmom. Included in that furniture were my grandmother’s kitchen table, a dresser, a bookshelf, a coffee table, and a writing desk that I am now using as a kitchen island.
I am absolutely in love with my new island. It is a little beat up with a few scratches, and its legs are somewhat loose so it wobbles. The drawer is mostly intact except that the bottom has come loose. But, all that is easily mended.
So that I don’t damage the quality of the wood, I’ll be filling in the scratches with a homemade stain of black walnut hulls that have been boiled and steeped. To solve the problem of the legs, I’ll spray WD40 on the bolts and tighten them (they are quite rusted). And to repair the drawer, I will recycle the nails already on the bottom of the drawer. When it’s all done, I’ll place a table runner and a bowl of bright, colorful fruit or maybe a vase of roses on top. The bottom shelf will of course be used for my cookbooks.
If that had been all that was sent, I would have been more than pleased. However, my father also sent some family heirlooms that could easily be considered antiques.
This is a silhouette is of either my great-grandfather or great-uncle. My dad couldn’t quite tell me, but even if it weren’t someone from my family, I’d still be excited to have it. Before cameras were easily accessible and getting portraits done were affordable, people had their silhouettes done. When I was younger, we had a silhouette of my grandmother hanging on the wall, and I thought it was the neatest thing I had ever seen.
I was given two of these kerosene lamps, and I can’t wait to clean them up. These sat on either side of a sideboard in our living room when I was growing up, and at some point, my dad tried to make them electric. I don’t think it worked, but the cords are still there. I’ll be cleaning the glass, removing the rust, and using gold leaf to hide previous damage.
And then there’s this:
This painting always hung over the couch in the living room, and always intrigued me. What I didn’t know until a couple weeks ago is that this is the first painting that my grandmother ever attempted. My dad had no idea how old it is, but he knows that it was done before he was born and after she married his father because it was signed with ‘Bailey.’ I looked at it very closely and noticed that it is a mix of oil and acrylic—something that I do in my own paintings. Because it’s been in a storage building for years, I’ll have to restore it back to its original brightness, but even without restoration, it is absolutely fabulous, simply because it came from her.



