Monday, July 18, 2011

Chalkboard Fridge

Another project involving chalkboard paint. I know, you're SHOCKED!! I'll totally admit it, I'm hooked on this stuff. My family teases and says if they stand still long enough, I will paint them. Probably not too far-fetched, I'm afraid;). Have you tried it? The spray or the can - both are FANTASTIC. I got my trusty can out this weekend AGAIN and made this:
Cute! Started it Friday night after the kiddos went to bed and Paul left for a lacrosse game. Quiet house, you know I was gonna get into something, right?! I picked up some magnetic primer at Walmart last week:
That stuff is pretty cool! Read the directions carefully - it says to stir, and STIR you must! It's very settled on the bottom, so it took quite a few minutes to get that sucker going. It's very thin and watery at the top, but once you stir it, it gets more of a paint consistency. It also says to do a few thin coats rather than 2 thick ones, so that's what I did. And it says to wait 30 minutes between coats. So I did. A fridge is way too important (and costly!) to not follow the directions, am I right?!  Can you imagine, "Sorry, hon, ruined the fridge..." So yes, I was a teensy bit scared starting this project! Most things I do are from yard sales or something, and the worst that could happen is I ruin a 50 cent cake stand, ya know?! You might be wondering why I bothered with the magnetic primer in the first place, since it was already a magnetized surface, but that's so it remains that way after several coats of chalkboard paint. I used a foam roller (as I was told):
And after an hour and a half (drying time for 3 coats), it went from this:
to this:
So that was Friday night. It says to wait 4 hours until painting it with whatever paint you want (in my case, chalkboard paint), and I was not about to stay up until 1:30am - even I'm not that crazy! Ok, maybe I am, but not that particular night;). I got out my chalkboard paint the next day during naptime:
Man I love that stuff. I painted 2 or 3 light coats (I think 3, but they were very thin coats), letting them dry about a half hour or so in between coats. Then, being the good girl that I am, waited 24 hours like the can tells me to, before I wrote on it;). In the meantime, Hubs and I got to work on the molding. We measured the distance around the fridge to see how much we'd need, and he went to Lowe's and picked up 2 large pieces of (already painted white) wood molding. We already had some downstairs from a previous project, so I'm not sure the exact amount of footage he bought.

Wish I had a picture of this next step, but I ran out to do the grocery shopping, and while the kids were napping, my lovely husband got out the miter saw and surprised me by cutting it to size. I have to say, I was tickled when I got home and he told me he had done it already - that's love, right?! In my bizarre world, that beats a bouquet of flowers! What a weirdo I am...

So the pieces of molding looked like this:
with the help of this
He simply cut the pieces to the length of the side of the fridge, then did the corners, so it looks like a frame. I'm reeeeally bad at this lingo, I know. Sorry 'bout that. Still pretty knew at all this molding/miter saw business.

Then it was onto figuring out the best way to attach the molding. I figured, it's a magnetic surface, so why not magnetic tape? Bought 2 of these rolls, and used every last inch:
You'll need to double up the tape like this:
 I placed one strip on it at first, and it didn't hold well enough. Then you just have to stick those bad boys on the fridge and you're done!
I love it! And it's hard to see, but if you look at the middle picture, on the right wall, I made a chalkboard menu a few months back framed with the exact same molding. They sort of mirror one another, which I like. This is what it looks like:
AND my AWESOME black and white island that I just painted goes so well with it! Bonus! I think it's super fun, and perfect for the kids to play, make grocery or to-do lists, or countdowns to the beach or Christmas or last day of school...(I LOOOVE me some countdowns!!). It really wasn't hard, or expensive, which is always a good thing too! Don't you just love it when a project is smooth sailing? Doesn't happen too often, but it's awesome when it does!

7 comments:

Amelia Ariella said...

This is EXACTLY what I'm looking for! I was thinking of doing it but I was really chicken! Thanks for taking the risk and for writing such precise directions. I'll take photos to show you how it turns out!

Liz said...

Awesome, Amelia!! Glad I can help:) and yes, would LOVE to see how it turns out! You can post it on my Facebook page of you like:) Thanks for reading!

Kimberly said...

This is awsome! I watch Good Luck Charlie on the Disney station with my kids and I always wanted a chalkboard fridge and it baffled me how they got it. You did it that is awsome. The only thing is I have like one of those white fridges. It is not stainless steel so I dont know how it would work when it is not a smooth surface, do you know what I mean? what do you think? Or would I be better off just makings a small one on the wall like you did earlier?

Liz said...

Thank you, Kimberly! The side of my fridge isn't stainless steel, it's that bumpy, textured "fridge" surface, so yours would work fine! Good luck, and thanks for reading! :)

Kimberly said...

awesome great! thanks

rebekah @ justfordaisy said...

Okay! :) I love love love this!! :) I headed out to the garage today and grabbed the rest of my tin of blackboard paint! I'm inspired! :) Thanks... I'm going to paint the back of the bathroom door in blackboard paint so that I can write memory verses on there! :)
Thanks for sharing - I'd love to one day do the fridge! Love the border idea too! I'm your newest follower - come say hi at Just For Daisy!

Anonymous said...

Do you think this would work on a wood framed out fridge?