Upcycling for Good

Childs' treasure chest

Turn an ordinary wooden gift box into a treasure chest!

A place to keep Lego, figurines, and all the treasures kids love to collect. Add a unique decorative feature to the lid to make it a special keepsake.

Finished treasure chest

Resene upcycling for good with Sarah Herring - Project 64

You will need:

  • Painter’s masking tape, pencil, eraser, ruler and scissors
  • Clear drying and strong hold glue
  • Test pot and detail brushes
  • Resene testpots in your choice of colours; Sarah chose Resene Bunting, Resene Wafer and Resene Escapade
  • Resene metallic testpot in Resene Goldmine
  • Resene Quick Dry waterborne primer undercoat
  • Assorted buttons, balsa wood shapes, stick on letters and other embellishments you like
 
Gift box before upcycling
Before
Finished treasure chest
Finished project
Finished treasure chest
Finished project

Top tip:  If your box is old or a colour you don’t like, repaint the whole box using your chosen Resene colour, before applying your stripes and robot using a Resene testpot. If your child is keen on trains, cars, space or something else, consider incorporating one of their favourite themes onto the lid in place of the robot.

Step 1
Step one
Step 2
Step two
Step 3
Step three

Step one:  Check for any repairs that are needed, then sand with some sandpaper to remove any old stain if present. Apply Resene Quick Dry over the old colour, if required.

This wooden box was in great condition, as it was not previously painted nor had it been damaged at all. Sarah gave it a light sand to clean up some of the rough edges (always important to consider when you are working on a kid’s project!) and applied one coat of Resene Quick Dry waterborne Primer undercoat to the lid, to cover up the red design that was currently on there. Because it was a sliding lid, Sarah did not apply paint to the areas where there would be frequent movement.

Step two:  Apply two coats of your chosen lid colour with a testpot brush. Sarah chose a Resene Wafer. Once dry, measure and mask out square shapes to make a robot design on the lid.

Step three:  Once you have the general shapes of the robot ready to go, paint them using your chosen Resene testpot colours. Sarah used Resene Bunting and Resene Escapade and painted a square for the head, and then a larger square for the body. She also painted small balsa wood shapes using a Resene metallic testpot in Resene Goldmine. Sarah glued these shapes as well as decorative buttons to complete the robot character. The idea was to fashion the robot out of the kind of bits and bobs that you might find stored inside a treasure box like this!

Step 3
Step three contd.
Step 4
Step four
Step 5
Step five

Step four:  Use adhesive lettering to label the lid with the words ‘Bits & Pieces’, or paint your own letters using a Resene testpot.

Step five:  Set aside the lid and mask out three stripes around the outside of the box using painter’s masking tape. Paint three stripes using your testpots.

Step 5
Step five contd.
Step 6
Step six
Finished
Finished toy box

Step six:  Sarah used Resene Bunting, Resene Wafer and Resene Escapade to complement the artwork on the lid. A few more adhesive words spelling out things like ‘Lego‘, ‘Toys‘, ‘Treasure‘ and ‘Fun‘ placed along the stripes completed the project.

Fill the finished box with trinkets and treasures and all the things kids like to collect! Hopefully no snails and worms!