DIY striped cabinet

Habitat bright ideas with Fleur Thorpe – DIY projects

Turn a boring old piece of furniture into a colourful feature with a combination of colour and stripes.

How to create a DIY striped cabinet
This pyjama-striped cabinet is bright and fresh in Resene Teal Blue and Resene Koru. Wall painted in Resene Carrara and architraves in Resene Half Rice Cake

You will need

Instructions

How to create a DIY striped cabinet:

DIY striped cabinet - Step 1 Step 1
Start by removing the handles and giving all surfaces a sand with medium grit sandpaper. Wipe the dust away with a soft cloth/rag. Use a small microfibre roller to apply one coat of Resene Quick Dry. Once this has dried, give it a quick sand with fine grit sandpaper. Wipe the dust away again.


DIY striped cabinet - Step 2 Step 2
Paint the body of the cabinet and the drawer front in Resene Teal Blue. Use Resene Lustacryl semi-gloss waterborne enamel for a hardwearing surface. Paint the two cupboard doors in Resene Koru. Fleur left the paint to cure overnight before doing the next stage.


DIY striped cabinet - Step 3 Step 3
Measure the width of one cupboard door and divide this by the number of stripes you want. Now measure the length of the other door and divide this by the number of stripes you want. Fleur managed to get her stripes to be the same width on both doors, but you could try doing different sized stripes on either door for a different look. Use painter masking tape to tape the stripes. Use a paintbrush to paint on more Resene Teal Blue to create the blue stripes.


DIY striped cabinet - Step 4 Step 4
Paint two coats and remove the tape as soon as you finish the second coat, while the paint is still wet. Once the paint has cured overnight, reattach the handles.


DIY striped cabinet - Finished project Finished project
A close-up of the finished project.

Top tip:  For an interesting gloss contrast, use Resene Enamacryl gloss waterborne enamel for your secondary colour. The extra gloss will help make that colour look brighter and pop more against the main colour.

Styling and images by Fleur Thorpe. May 2022.