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$750 to paint a dresser??

8 years ago

I have my parents' 1948 solid wild cherry bedroom set. I use the headboard and nightstand at the lake, the dresser and chest are in storage. All but the headboard had the finish damaged down to bare wood from the nurses at the assisted living putting urine soaked incontinence garments on top. In addition, there is a slight mold smell. Originally, I saw this picture of my exact chest, and thought to paint the chest an admiral blue to go in the kids' room at the lake. I found someone to do it but the estimate came back yesterday at $750 for just the chest. I need to do the other 3 pieces but thought I would just have them stained back to the original. Now, I'm not sure what to do. Should I:

1) Paint the chest myself, and put the funds towards professionally finishing the other pieces?

2) Have all the pieces finished in the same stain rather than just 1 piece painted? (doubtful they would ever again be used in the same room, at least by me)

3) Bite the bullet, and pay.

I want them to look nice. My father told me how long my mother looked to find something she liked.

Here's my chest (though not MY chest). The original pulls are gold, not silver.




Comments (19)

  • 8 years ago

    Yikes! That seems like an awful lot to paint a dresser. Can you get a couple more quotes before deciding what to do? Last year I had a coffee table professionally spray painted with lacquer. That cost was $175, and included all the prep/sanding work. I guess I can see that a dresser would cost a lot more, especially with all the prep required, but $750 sure is a LOT more.

    deeinohio thanked Bluebell66
  • 8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    Have you seen the work of the $750 person? Anyone can paint a dresser but a good paint job where one uses finishing pads after each coat for a glorious end finish is another story. You also want to avoid someone who does not understand over-spray and sheen inconsistencies (if using the spray method). This piece needs care because it's personal. Still, I would look at others work and get estimates before deciding.

    deeinohio thanked just_terrilynn
  • 8 years ago

    It's a lot of work to paint a dresser right. It is detailed and tedious work which takes a lot of time.

    deeinohio thanked User
  • 8 years ago

    Does this estimate also address the mold smell? With what you'd said about the pieces, I wonder what it would take to get the urine stains out of the other pieces to allow them to be stained rather than painted. I agree with the others above that you want to see the quality of the person's work.

    deeinohio thanked My3dogs ME zone 5A
  • 8 years ago

    With cherry, I'd have all the pieces stained.

    deeinohio thanked User
  • 8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    So long as the wood could be restored to its true beauty I would definitely go with refinished. I don't think you actually have to stain Cherrywood to make it beautiful.

    deeinohio thanked practigal
  • 8 years ago

    I am in the process of painting and glazing my bedroom set - chest, dresser, mirror, headboard and 2 nightstands. Yes, it is a LOT of work and I've been slowly working on it for a few weeks and am about 1/2 done. You can do it yourself, but be prepared for a lot of work. Some skip the prep work and that is a mistake. I don't care how many paints claim "no sanding needed" it always should be sanded. To restain it, you would need to strip all the old finish off first. Not sure what you can do about the mold smell though. $750 for one piece seems pretty high.

    deeinohio thanked lam702
  • 8 years ago

    I think the slight mold smell comes from the headboard, which was locked in my parents' house after they entered assisted living. There had been a dampness smell in their house for quite a while. Here's the damage to the top of the nightstand. It's representative of the damage to the other pieces.. There are no stains, just finish damage. Thank you, Lisa. It was very disrespectful. I once found directions taped to the side of the chest. Has anyone ever used a auto painter to paint furniture? Though, I'm now wondering about just having it all stripped and restrained.

  • 8 years ago

    Paint - I would do it myself. Refinish - pay a pro, if you haven't done it before. $750 sounds like an awful lot for painting, but as justerrilynn pointed out, there are paint job, and there are fabulous paint jobs. Which do you need?

    You can try painting a small drawer yourself, to see how you feel about the project and the result.

    deeinohio thanked AnnKH
  • 8 years ago

    $750 sounds fair for a professional refinish.

    Preparation alone will require more than just sanding and priming.

    If there's odor and urine salts a special neutralizing wash is required followed by an enamel under-body to provide adequate enamel holdout for the topcoat

    deeinohio thanked Michael
  • 8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    I don't know if all the old stain can be removed, but if so, you can just clear coat cherry. It will be much prettier than the original reddish stain. Or you can have a brown stain applied to counteract some of the natural red tone. Paint is for cheap wood, not heirloom cherry.

    deeinohio thanked User
  • 8 years ago

    Thanks, Brushworks. i did mention the source of the damage to him, so, hopefully he included that in his estimate. That's a great idea, mayflowers! Clear rather than stain.

  • 8 years ago

    I think it depends on how you feel about the pieces and if you want to preserve them for future generations of your family.

    If you want to preserve them and return them to their like-new condition and pass them down to your children then I'd have them professionally re-stained in the cherry.

    If you are just "using what you have" and doubtful they will be passed down as family heirlooms, I would paint them myself. I painted our 30 year old bedroom furniture and it was time consuming but not difficult. I lightly sanded, primed, painted. I even used a roller with low nap. Now, I wasn't super particular about the finish because I won't be taking the set with me when retire and move away in a few years. A brush finish is probably more professional looking. Bedroom furniture doesn't get the wear and tear kitchen cabinets do and my paint job has held up just fine. I used BM paint in satin or semigloss.


  • 8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    I'd either use General Finishes milk paint (it's not like normal milk paint).

    Or BM Advance high gloss.


    http://chiccalifornia.com/2013/12/19/before-and-after-furniture-transformation-2/


    http://thelittleblackdoor.blogspot.com/2013/03/high-gloss-dresser-tutorial.html


    Or spray paint. There was a review of a spray high gloss by beekeeperswife (a long time ago).

    deeinohio thanked nosoccermom
  • 8 years ago

    Thanks, nosoccermom. I did save beekeeperswife's instructiond.

  • 8 years ago

    Thanks Lily'smom. I'm not looking for rustic. The pieces are very elegant, so I want the finish to enhance the elegance. Tank you for such detailed instructions.

  • 8 years ago

    I suppose it depends where you live, but I agree that is double what one would ever pay. A spray shop that is set up takes the nobs off, sands and sprays. So not a lot of detail work. Having it sprayed at say a car body shop would be the smartest..the paint will hold up then.

    deeinohio thanked arcy_gw
  • 8 years ago

    Older furniture is often much better quality than new. I tend to agree that stripping and clear coating it is the way to go. The beauty of the wood should be seen, not covered up.

    deeinohio thanked lam702