Reader Max is about to move into a new apartment in Chicago and has been frequenting estate sales to collect vintage furniture for his new place. He has found several pieces he loves — a dining set, end tables, record player, easy chair and vintage pendant light — but he is unsure if the mismatched wood finishes will all work together in the main living area of his tiny city apartment. Should he stay true to the original or try his best to make all the wood tones more matchy-matchy? Readers — let’s hear your points of view, then Pam and I will be back at noon with our thoughts and a mood board.
Max writes:
Hi, my name is Max. I love your blog, and consider it to be the fountain of knowledge on all things retro. I recently acquired two gorgeous, if slightly out of shape danish modern end tables. I love them, but there just one problem – they’re teak, and the majority of my collection of mid century furniture is blonde. And therein lies the rub. I have to refinish the tables, and was wondering if it would be a huge mistake to redo them in a lighter tone to match my other furniture. Your help in this moral dilemma is appreciated.
I’m really excited about this! Let me apologize in advance that my furniture isn’t together at the moment – it’s currently spread around my mother’s home in preparation for my move into a new apartment in Chicago. Here are the photos –
First, the blondes –
Above: My mid-century dining set. This is my only non-estate sale find, I bought it online, and it’s being shipped from LA.
Above: My record player – decidedly blonde.
Now for the darker woods – above: one of my two, tiered end tables. You can’t tell from a distance, but it’s in pretty rough condition.
Above: My sconces, which match nicely with the tables…
And finally, my chair, which is kind of in between the two wood tones I have.
I should probably mention that it’s a truly minuscule apartment, and all this furniture would be in the same room. So do I stain my furniture into one, cohesive tone, or set my OCD aside and embrace the chaos? Can’t wait to hear the responses, thanks for responding!
Match the woods in one room — or mix and match?
Kate replies:
Personally, my home is a mix of many different tones of wood — and I think they all work well together. The key is treating the wood like a color in your room design, making sure to repeat it once or twice throughout the room to help create a cohesive overall look. That being said, the blonde of the dining set is repeated in the record cabinet and the teak end tables look to be about the same color as the wood parts of the pendant light and the arms of the easy chair. Heck — the upholstery on the easy chair seems to be a similar color to “blonde” which further repeats the color throughout your space. In my opinion, refinishing the end tables in a finish close to the original and leaving the chair and light alone is perfectly okay.
Pam replies:
First of all, this is no “moral dilemma” in my book. We’ve discussed this issue several times before — to stain or paint or otherwise refinish original wood finish furniture, and oh my, can opinions start to flare. Let’s all be polite, please, on this! Here is my longest monologue on the subject — it’s about painting, but clearly goes for refinishig too. It was originally posted in this story about Jeff and Debbie’s trash-to-treasure vintage furniture makoever — there were lots of good reader comments, too:
When it comes to repainting wood furniture — or wood trim in your house — I see this as a very personal, aesthetic issue — not one of righteousness. That said, I encourage readers to learn about the pros and cons of each approach, including how painting will potentially affect the underlying monetary and/or historic value of a piece of vintage or antique furniture … same with original wood trim, paneling or cabinetry. If you have ever watched Antiques Roadshow and seen a piece of vintage furniture appraised for thousands or hundreds of thousands of dollars including because it has its “original finish and patina,” well, there you go, that’s why you might want to go slow before fixing in on the decision to paint over an original finish wood.
Overall, though: Whether we “like” furniture and trim painted versus with a natural wood finish generally is a function of fashion. One year natural wood is “in”. The next year, painted is “in.” [One year it’s light wood. The next year it’s white paint. The next year it’s dark wood. The next year it’s distressed paint. The next year it’s medium wood. The next year it’s milk paint…] Ping. Pong. A wood finish can be very beautiful. A painted finish can be very beautiful. I consider either finish choice an aesthetic preference, not an aesthetic imperative or aesthetic absolute.
- Here’s another story with lots of discussion of the issue.
- Note: I believe a medium wood tone — for furniture or cabinetry — is likely to be the most “timeless.”
- And stepping it up a whole ‘nother notch: Gut remodel without guilt: The Retro Renovator’s Creed.
All that said: Mixing and matching wood tones can work just fine — but I do think it requires a deft eye. In your case, the fact that you have the blonde in the dining area and the teak in the living area makes it much easier, because these two areas serve distinct functions.
Since your space is small, I think you can work to tie the two rooms together with your textiles. Perhaps you can find a fabric for pinch pleats or romans or fabric blinds or pillows, at the least, that includes both the light and dark wood tone colors within the pattern. You can also consider putting a brown leather or vinyl or woven fabric on the seats of the dining room chairs, which will harken to the darker woods nearby.
If you own your apartment and can paint, you might also want to paint an accent wall in the dining area set that makes it more of a room within a room.
Finally — and here’s another great thing about buying vintage furniture cheap and cheerful: If you decide you really don’t like the mix and match, as reader Dietz123 pointed out in the morning comments, “you wrote to us because it really does bother you…. If you enjoy the hunt, then pick a wood tone (perhaps blonde) and then only collect that color going forward and resell the rest.” I was going to say you could refinish everything to match — but other readers pointed out that it would be very diffficult to get different wood species to match in tone even with the same color stain. Vintage furniture is pretty darn abundant — sell off what you don’t want — and patiently wait for the Retro Decorating Gods to deliver what you are looking for — they usually do!
Pulling wood tones together:
How might it look if we use textiles and accessories to pull the two woods together? Pretty good, we think!
- Make curtains, a valance, table runner or throw pillows from this vintage fabric from Ebay seller Electricbelle — we recently featured her stash of amazing NOS fabric
- Add a rug to help pull the wood tones together.How about this Alliyah handmade brown wool blend area rug from Overstock.com
- Put pops of orange around the room like this pair of vintage ceramic orange and brown lamps from Etsy seller FITZandFergus
- And this vintage California Pottery orange leaf candy dish from Etsy seller iWunderVintage
- Possibly recover dining set chair seats with a a well-saturated brown vinyl, leather or fabric to tie into dark wood tones
- From here, add favorite artwork on to the walls and well, you’re sitting pretty among all those beautiful wood tones.
In place of the orange — we could also imagine either blue or green (both well-saturated) as a principal accent color. E.g. Robert’s Is it True Blondes Have More Fun bedroom designs. You could also bring in more color with a different rug, although again, we’d like to see both woodtones in it, too.
Good luck! Let us know how it all turns out!
Palm Springs Stephan says
Do any of the pieces have even the remotest potential for being or becoming desirous to serious collectors of antique furniture? Are any of them from a “name” maker (George nelson, Herman Miller, etc)? Do you have any eye towards the pieces as financial investments? Any regular viewer of Antiques Roadshow knows their mantra: Never, never, never refinish collectible wood furniture. Collectors prize original finishes, even those that have become “distressed” and unappealing to the average person. Refinishing a rare Heywood Wakefield piece can chop the financial value by 80-90%. Refinishing authentic Gustav Stickley furniture essentially destroys the piece. If all of your pieces are non-name and mass-produced, then no worries. But if any of them are collectible, or might become collectible, leave them alone.
lisa in Seattle says
One thing that might increase the “matchiness” of the dining room table is a pretty tray or bowl in a darker/medium-toned wood that ties in the other pieces — perhaps over a table runner that brings in some darker or jewel tones. Just a suggestion in case you put everything together and the much lighter tones stand out too much for your taste. Personally, I think it is all going to look great. Some pieces won’t quite work right next to each other, maybe, so just play around until you like it.
Eric says
With woodtones, you either want to be an exact match or a mile away. Woodtones from different lines and makers within the blonde or walnut always seem to have different hues anyway. At least with what you have it looks intentional. Unless you had everything, say within a particular line, Wakefield, etc., it just looks like you are wanted blonde, but could not find the right pieces to match exact, so just went with what you could find. You have some great pieces, they way they are it will come off looking like you intentionally designed each area with a different look.
Scott says
I say use your artistic eye and if the shapes look good together don’t stress about the wood tone colors. Look at vintage magazines and you’ll quickly see some wild ecclectic pairings that will boost your confidence when it comes to mixing and matching. Ultra-modern, antiques, asian-inspired, and primative pieces can all play together. Relax and have fun with it. Period TV shows can be great references too.
My only tip would be I think it will be easier to unify varying wood tones in a room if you use a strong wall color to pull everything in the room together. To me a neutral scheme would make the effect look more accidental than intentional. With the right wall color I have a feeling no one will even notice the varying wood tones.
Rick says
Mix & don’t match TOO much. You have some great pieces. Not long ago it seemed I had too much brown; new finds, a bit of DIY and also some colorful BIG artwork (thankfully thrifted) has jazzed up my former sea of brown LR.
Darlene says
Who cares about mix and match stains. You’ve got good stuff, leave it alone!
Randerson says
Have to second, third, fourth, etc all of the above votes to leave as- is, or sell the 2 walnut end tables and look for some blonde ones (not that hard to find) if the darker tones are bothersome. We had the same issue with a 1960s 6 ft. long teak (we love the warm color of real teakwood) Swedish sideboard that we have in the LR, along with a nice ’60s modern but US made credenza-shelf that we were given that is in that slightly gray-toned light fruit-wood so popular back then (with brushed chrome legs and drawer handles), and in the corner a pair of large-ish ’70s JBL speakers in Medium Walnut finish. We decided that we liked all of them well enough on their own merits that they could just coexist as they are!
June Cahill says
Matchy-Matchy has never been my motto! – It’s more like ‘live, love and enjoy’ – sitting here in my kitchen, I’ve got 4 different wood tones surrounding me – my wood windows, my darker cabinets, the original washed mahogany pocket doors and my lighter maple floors. All combines to make a wonderful warmth – if everything were one color, how boring would THAT be?
Tara says
I would keep the wood colors as they are. That being said, if you are unhappy with the condition of the end tables you can always refinish them. I am all for preserving pieces for future generations, but not at the cost of living with a piece I am unhappy with in the present. I redid the top of my vintage dining table my sister gave to me that was badly water stained and am happy with my decision. I would use fabric on furniture/drapery and accent pieces to pull everything together.
Brooke says
I would agree with everyone else. It’ll be extremely hard to get your other furniture blonde to “match” the table and chair set. I say get set up and live with all the furniture as it is now and if you still don’t like the combination then start looking for a table and chair set that is more in the wood tones of the rest of your furniture and sell the blonde set. While it is the largest item in the bunch it’s the one that doesn’t “go” with all the others and it’s better to sell the set to someone who appreciates it than to ruin the finish/intent of the piece by refinishing and staining it.
On that note if you do actually love the dining set then I think an easy solution to help tie it into the tones of the other pieces to to reupholster the seats. I don’t mind the combination of wood tones but the main thing that doesn’t work with that blonde set is that the fabric on the seats is light and makes the whole set dull looking. If you were to find a medium toned fabric in a colour that compliments the others woods and the other fabric furniture you already have then it’ll help bring the whole room together. Then find a rug for under the table to help ground it in a complimentary colour to your chair seats and it’ll greatly help the room. Reupholstering the seats will save you a ton of time, money and pain.