Times Colonist

Bringing new life to cast-offs makes decorating fun

A little imaginatio­n goes a long way

- DEBBIE TRAVIS House to Home house2home@debbietrav­is.com

One of my favourite pastimes is repurposin­g. I’m a scavenger — I wander with eyes wide open through a yard or a field filled with people’s discarded furniture, odd lengths of cast-off wood, piles of stone salvaged from centuries-old buildings, used windows, homeless doors.

I’m looking for items that can be brought back to life with a little TLC and imaginatio­n. My mind races with possibilit­ies.

Those wide wood planks from a barn would make great benches for the garden. The window frame with layers of peeling paint can be transforme­d into a picture frame for a collage of nature photograph­s.

And the oversized door that once welcomed guests at a country home is going to be a tabletop.

I have just the room for it. This is what makes decorating so much fun. It becomes a journey of discovery.

The biggest renovation I have ever undertaken is the total transforma­tion of an old and very rundown farmhouse and outbuildin­gs in the heart of Tuscany.

This was a labour of love to be sure, and took more than four years from start to finish. (Are we really ever finished?)

I had my job cut out for me with so many rooms to furnish, and my passion for discoverin­g found pieces at little cost and putting them back to use again really paid off.

On the property is a gigantic barn that we rent out, and I wanted it to be comfy and stylish. I visited many street markets, and found all kinds of old goodies in other farmyards.

The table with the rich, waxed patina in the foreground was the old front door of the villa. I made a metal frame that it sits on, and the inverted panels are great for piling up coffee-table books.

The long table at the back of the room is recycled old chestnut wood planks that were originally beams.

And to the left, would you guess that the bar is, in fact, an old factory shoe rack?

If you are craving a change, there are many ways to upgrade cabinets and storage units. Cut out the centres of cabinet doors and replace them with glass fronts.

Alternate open and closed storage space; use interestin­g baskets, pitchers and crockery to hold utensils; refashion curtain or drapery fabric to hide clutter or cover a table.

Check out your local hardware store, and think outside the box.

Screw four wheels to the base of a simple storage cabinet, attach push handles and top with a tray and you’ve got an elegant serving unit.

When salvaging, be on the lookout for old building and factory sales.

You’re sure to discover furniture from a bygone era that has its own special style and plenty of life left, and just needs a new home and a fresh purpose to continue its usefulness.

Debbie Travis’s House to Home column is produced by Debbie Travis and Barbara Dingle. Please email questions to house2home@debbietrav­is.com. You can follow Debbie on Twitter at twitter.com/debbie_travis, and visit Debbie’s website, debbietrav­is.com.

 ??  ?? The table in the foreground is the old front door of Debbie Travis’s Tuscan villa.
The table in the foreground is the old front door of Debbie Travis’s Tuscan villa.
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