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Thursday, February 16, 2012

DIY Mercury Glass Lamps?



I was inspired by these Pottery Barn (very expensive!) lamps and THIS DIY tutorial called Why Buy What You Can Make?

The premise is simple: take cheap and/or second hand glass lamps, spray them with water, then coat with Krylon Looking Glass Spray Paint. Finally, give them a light sand. Paint will easily flake/sand away from areas covered with water droplets, leaving you with Mercury Glass replica.

I decided to give it a go.

First of all, glass lamps are hard to find.

Second of all, I wasn't exactly sure what they meant? Did the glass have to be clear or was it just a matter of being made of glass?

I did my best at my local second-hand shop and found one metallic lamp and one made of a white glass. $12 spent, total.



I covered the cords and the tops with bags, held in place with painter's tape.



I took them outside (very warm winter day!) and I sprayed them with water and then spray paint.
Krylon Spray Paints are usually sold at Walmart. Our Walmart didn't have Looking Glass Spray paint, so I opted instead to get a can of silver metallic paint and a can of nickel metallic paint.

You can see that the coat is quite thick and opaque. Not at all the reflective look I was hoping for. This is pre-sanding, of course.




Once I started to sand, I noticed two things:

1. The White Glass Lamp was not going to work. With white bits showing through, it just looked like a bad, peeling paint job. That lamp will be kept and used again, in another room!



2. The gold metallic lamp was going to work. Though I wasn't getting the Mercury Glass look I had hoped for, I ended up with a tarnished/antiqued silver look that I love. Perfect for our bedroom which, in the end, will combine lots of weathered wood, silver and white.







I topped it off with a new burlap shade ($12.99).

Now all I have to do is find an un-matching, matching lamp that I can spray for the other night stand!
Have a great weekend!

2 comments:

  1. Nice! I like the finish of your lamp better than the examples from PB!

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  2. Thanks for sharing your process. I was going to try the Glass paint, but I'll go for the metallic. Your lamp looks great!

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