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#1
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Refinishing a Cheap Ikea Bed Frame
Hello,
I have a cheap but reliable simple Ikea box bed frame. It originally came with that fancy wood grained style contact paper glue to the particle board type wood to give the "rich and famous look" without spending much money. After multiple moves, the contact paper is tearing off and I was hoping the group might have some suggestions for how to cover up the tattered mess. I have considered contact paper again or possibly buying some thin wood and gluing/nailing it around the outside. The parts that need to be covered are the outside facing wood (largest surface area) and the 1" width of the same piece of wood that faces up. Any thoughts are appreciated. Thanks! |
#2
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Refinishing a Cheap Ikea Bed Frame
wrote in message
oups.com... Hello, I have a cheap but reliable simple Ikea box bed frame. It originally came with that fancy wood grained style contact paper glue to the particle board type wood to give the "rich and famous look" without spending much money. After multiple moves, the contact paper is tearing off and I was hoping the group might have some suggestions for how to cover up the tattered mess. I have considered contact paper again or possibly buying some thin wood and gluing/nailing it around the outside. The parts that need to be covered are the outside facing wood (largest surface area) and the 1" width of the same piece of wood that faces up. Any thoughts are appreciated. Thanks! What does the wood look like? Particle board, or solid wood? |
#3
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Refinishing a Cheap Ikea Bed Frame
What does the wood look like? Particle board, or solid wood? The "real" wood underneath the contact paper looks like thick particle board. |
#4
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Refinishing a Cheap Ikea Bed Frame
On Feb 27, 9:47 am, wrote:
Hello, I have a cheap but reliable simple Ikea box bed frame. It originally came with that fancy wood grained style contact paper glue to the particle board type wood to give the "rich and famous look" without spending much money. After multiple moves, the contact paper is tearing off and I was hoping the group might have some suggestions for how to cover up the tattered mess. I have considered contact paper again or possibly buying some thin wood and gluing/nailing it around the outside. The parts that need to be covered are the outside facing wood (largest surface area) and the 1" width of the same piece of wood that faces up. Don't waste your time or money. Ikea is good for what they do, however, their furniture is not worth the effort to refinish. Standard advice: toss it and buy another. Refinishing is for real wood not particle board. If you are absolutely in love with this priceless heirloom then by all means do whatever you wish with it. It's your bed, your time and money. The ideas you have are fine otherwise you can just paint the darn thing and call it done. Whatever you do, you cannot screw up a cheap piece like that. |
#5
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Refinishing a Cheap Ikea Bed Frame
wrote in message
oups.com... What does the wood look like? Particle board, or solid wood? The "real" wood underneath the contact paper looks like thick particle board. If you can remove the vinyl fake wood stuff completely, and sand the wood enough to produce a surface with no remaining adhesive, you might be able to apply a nice wood veneer. If I were you, I'd post this same question in another newsgroup, rec.woodworking. You'll probably be buried in response by tonight. Something to consider: The cost of the tools needed to do the job may be higher than buying a better wooden bed frame, or a nice solid metal one. Another option would be a dust ruffle to hide the ugly frame. I hate dust ruffles, but some people think they're great. |
#6
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Refinishing a Cheap Ikea Bed Frame
On Feb 27, 9:47 am, wrote:
Hello, I have a cheap but reliable simple Ikea box bed frame. It originally came with that fancy wood grained style contact paper glue to the particle board type wood to give the "rich and famous look" without spending much money. After multiple moves, the contact paper is tearing off and I was hoping the group might have some suggestions for how to cover up the tattered mess. I have considered contact paper again or possibly buying some thin wood and gluing/nailing it around the outside. The parts that need to be covered are the outside facing wood (largest surface area) and the 1" width of the same piece of wood that faces up. Any thoughts are appreciated. Thanks! I would go with contact paper. Its the easiest to do although may not be the cheapest. Next choice would be to clean it up and paint it. Another option Might be to get a sheet of the wall panelling and cut a piece of that to cover the side. You might need some trim to hide the edges. Whatever you try is coing to be cheaper than a new one. Unless you need a lot of tools. |
#7
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Refinishing a Cheap Ikea Bed Frame
On Feb 27, 8:08 am, "Lawrence" wrote:
On Feb 27, 9:47 am, wrote: Hello, I have a cheap but reliable simple Ikea box bed frame. It originally came with that fancy wood grained style contact paper glue to the particle board type wood to give the "rich and famous look" without spending much money. After multiple moves, the contact paper is tearing off and I was hoping the group might have some suggestions for how to cover up the tattered mess. I have considered contact paper again or possibly buying some thin wood and gluing/nailing it around the outside. The parts that need to be covered are the outside facing wood (largest surface area) and the 1" width of the same piece of wood that faces up. Don't waste your time or money. Ikea is good for what they do, however, their furniture is not worth the effort to refinish. Standard advice: toss it and buy another. Refinishing is for real wood not particle board. If you are absolutely in love with this priceless heirloom then by all means do whatever you wish with it. It's your bed, your time and money. The ideas you have are fine otherwise you can just paint the darn thing and call it done. Whatever you do, you cannot screw up a cheap piece like that. Don't waste your time or money. Ikea is good for what they do, however, their furniture is not worth the effort to refinish. Standard advice: toss it and buy another. Refinishing is for real wood not particle board. Lawrence's advice is right on target...... IMO your time would be better spent on something else, the frame probably isn't worth the time or material to fix it up. Refinishing this bed frame would be like "putting a $50 saddle on a $5 horse" Check out craigslist.org in your area for a really cheap replacement or even a beat up real wood frame that WOULD be worth refinishing. If you want to do the refinishing thing, start with something worth refinishing. I restore old stuff all the time but sometimes the original item was made of such cheap material it just ain't worth the effort. cheers Bob |
#8
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Refinishing a Cheap Ikea Bed Frame
On 27 Feb 2007 08:46:18 -0800, "BobK207" wrote:
Refinishing this bed frame would be like "putting a $50 saddle on a $5 horse" About 30 years ago, I bought a 50 dollar lock for 10 dollar bicycle. I still have the lock, still have the bike, and it was worth it for me. **The bike was built from parts from 6 other bikes found in the trash. I spent 10 dollars for a luggage rack, that usually doesn't come with new bikes anyhow. Check out craigslist.org in your area for a really cheap replacement or even a beat up real wood frame that WOULD be worth refinishing. If you want to do the refinishing thing, start with something worth refinishing. OTOH, this is not bad advice either. |
#9
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Refinishing a Cheap Ikea Bed Frame
On Feb 27, 9:32 am, mm wrote:
On 27 Feb 2007 08:46:18 -0800, "BobK207" wrote: Refinishing this bed frame would be like "putting a $50 saddle on a $5 horse" About 30 years ago, I bought a 50 dollar lock for 10 dollar bicycle. I still have the lock, still have the bike, and it was worth it for me. **The bike was built from parts from 6 other bikes found in the trash. I spent 10 dollars for a luggage rack, that usually doesn't come with new bikes anyhow. Check out craigslist.org in your area for a really cheap replacement or even a beat up real wood frame that WOULD be worth refinishing. If you want to do the refinishing thing, start with something worth refinishing. OTOH, this is not bad advice either. Actually your bike is / was not a " 5$ horse" just because it was put together from salvaged parts & you got it for $10 doens't mean its junk (like a lot of IKEA stuff) plus it has that luggage rack; a useful feature that most bikes don't have. You just got a very deal & very good value out of your salvaged bike. The analogy to your bike would be if the OP found a beat up solid wood bed frame & restored it....he would have created vaule but that same time & effort put into a particle board IKEA bed frame? A '65 Mustang or an early Porche is worth the effort......how about restoring a Yugo? when you're done, its still a Yugo btw if you're interested there are a couple of Yugos on eBay motors for less than $1000 cheers Bob |
#10
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Refinishing a Cheap Ikea Bed Frame
On Feb 27, 9:32 am, mm wrote:
On 27 Feb 2007 08:46:18 -0800, "BobK207" wrote: Refinishing this bed frame would be like "putting a $50 saddle on a $5 horse" About 30 years ago, I bought a 50 dollar lock for 10 dollar bicycle. I still have the lock, still have the bike, and it was worth it for me. **The bike was built from parts from 6 other bikes found in the trash. I spent 10 dollars for a luggage rack, that usually doesn't come with new bikes anyhow. Check out craigslist.org in your area for a really cheap replacement or even a beat up real wood frame that WOULD be worth refinishing. If you want to do the refinishing thing, start with something worth refinishing. OTOH, this is not bad advice either. mm- Actually your bike is / was not a " 5$ horse" just because it was put together from salvaged parts & you got it for $10 doens't mean its junk (like a lot of IKEA stuff) plus it has that luggage rack; a useful feature that most bikes don't have. You just got a very deal & very good value out of your salvaged bike. The analogy to your bike would be if the OP found a beat up solid wood bed frame & restored it....he would have created vaule but that same time & effort put into a particle board IKEA bed frame? A '65 Mustang or an early Porche is worth the effort......how about restoring a Yugo? when you're done, its still a Yugo btw if you're interested there are a couple of Yugos on eBay motors for less than $1000 cheers Bob |
#11
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Refinishing a Cheap Ikea Bed Frame
On 27 Feb 2007 11:08:12 -0800, "BobK207" wrote:
A '65 Mustang or an early Porche is worth the effort......how about restoring a Yugo? when you're done, its still a Yugo btw if you're interested there are a couple of Yugos on eBay motors for less than $1000 But can you still get Yugoslavian gasoline? cheers Bob |
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