Ah, the iconic IKEA Expedit. So useful, such awesome storage, but so not unique. I'll bet many of you have at least one of these in your home. Not that there's anything wrong with its look as-is, but after living with my big, dark, black-brown one for nearly four years, I was ready to update it and give it a little refresh - especially once I decided to go light and bright in my mini home office makeover. I left you hanging at the end of yesterday's post when it came to details on how I transformed this dark Expedit to a lighter and brighter (dare I say happier?) version, so today I'm back to share all the nitty gritty details! And I do mean all. Long post coming! Let's start with the before: It's a classic black-brown 4x2 unit. It was fine, but man it was visually heavy - if you know what I mean. We didn't buy it for this space and I didn't love it there, but I decided to make it work rather than buying a new piece of furniture for an apartment we wouldn't live in forever. It does a great job of providing the extra storage we need in the bedroom, but I was itching to make it prettier and a tad more organized. I debated with myself for what felt like an eternity on what to do with it. Should I Craiglist it and use that cash towards a new white one (that would certainly qualify as light and bright!)? Paint it (ugh, all those cubbies...)? Just be content with it (uh, no.)? Then I remembered how much I liked Sarah's fabric covered console table and thought I could do something similar with this piece. Around the same time, I spotted this post on using IKEA's Anno Sanela panel curtains as a grasscloth-esque wallpaper since the texture and material is very, very similar to grasscloth, but without the hefty price tag. Merging those two ideas in my head, I realized that I could try to "upholster" the Expedit using an Anno Sanela panel curtain and have a "grasscloth"-covered piece! After taking a few measurements to make sure the panel would be the right size to cover the Expedit, off to IKEA I went for one panel in gray, which was all I needed to cover the entire Expedit. (Side note - the IKEA photo of that panel curtain makes it look like a really dark color. It's not. It's much lighter in person and it's actually predominantly a blue-gray color.) Let's get to some details on how the project went down. First, I unrolled the entire curtain and laid it across the Expedit to make sure I liked the look and that my measurements were correct. I LOVED it, and my measurements were correct - yay! The only issue is that the panel curtain is about two inches too short to cover the Expedit from one side to the other, but that was an easy fix. More details on that in a minute. Obviously, the panel was too wide for the unit, so I trimmed it down once I had adhered the panel to the piece using - wait for it - Mod Podge! Honestly, I wasn't sure if Mod Podge would actually work or not, but I'm happy to report that it worked beautifully. I had it already, so it was worth a shot. I'm sure there are lots of adhesives that would work for this including things like spray glue, but since this worked for me, I didn't try anything else. I did find that I needed to slather it on pretty heavily (it dries clear, so no need to worry about the fact that it's white in the photo above) to get it to stick well. I used a cheap foam paintbrush to spread it out, which worked well. Work in small sections and smooth it down with your hands as you go to avoid any bubbles or puckering. I did the sides and top first with one long, continuous piece of the panel curtain. Once it was solidly glued down, I trimmed off the excess overhang in the front using regular scissors. The panel is made mostly out of paper (82%), so it's easy to cut. I just trimmed as closely to the edge as I could, and it worked out nicely. As I mentioned earlier, there's about a two-inch section at the bottom that wasn't covered by that first long piece since the panel wasn't quite long enough to cover it all (the panel is 118" long and three sides of an Expedit equal about 120"). Not a problem. I just measured a couple of small pieces of the leftover material I trimmed off and glued them right on there. You don't even see a seem since the fabric has so much variation in it. The photo below shows it all finished up with those two small pieces at the bottom. For the front, I decided to cover the four wide edges and leave the thinner inside areas as is. I kind of like the two-tone look, and honestly, it saved me a lot of frustration and time to not measure out and glue down all those thin pieces of material. I measured the front edges and cut pieces of the panel curtain material accordingly (two 58" pieces and two 31" pieces). I glued them down just like the other pieces. When it came to the corners, I decided to overlap the vertical pieces on top of the horizontal pieces to make it as seamless as possible. I purposely left the vertical pieces a little long so I could trim them to the exact length I needed once I glued them down. You can see how pretty that material is up close and how well it blends with both the black-brown color and the color of our bedspread in those two photos! Looks just like grasscloth, huh? After all the pieces were glued down, I left the whole thing to dry for awhile. While that was happening, I decided that such a pretty piece like this should also be well organized, so I took out the contents of all the cubes, reorganized some of the baskets, cleaned out a lot of the random junk you see in the nearest cube and made room for some future office organization items. (It looks like a black hole in there without all the baskets!) Once I put everything back in the cubbies, the final version ended up looking like this: SO nice and clean-looking - and well organized! I already had those magazine files (also from IKEA - I promise this isn't a sponsored post, ha!). Those are old versions of the Kassett magazine files, and I'm planning to use them for filing work-related items once I start accumulating those. I'm so pleased with how this all turned out. It puts a big ole smile on my face. It's the first thing you see from the doorway to our bedroom, so it's nice not to stare at a big dark piece of furniture every time I walk in there. Let's take one last look before and after: Such a difference. I hope y'all like it as much as I do! :) Total cost of this project: $15 for the Anno Sanela panel curtain. That's much better than spending $70 on a brand new Expedit, and I LOVE the custom look I got out of it! --------- linking up to: DIY Showoff, Rain on a Tin Roof, Home Stories A to Z, Uncommon Designs, If It's Not Baroque, Liz Marie Blog, Blissfully Ever After, Design, Dining and Diapers, Crafty Scrappy Happy, Craftberry Bush, The Shabby Creek Cottage, Tatertots and Jello, Serenity Now, It’s Overflowing, House of Rose, Love of Family and Home, Dear Creatives, Madigan Made, First Home...Love Life, Simply Dream and Create, Whipperberry, Sparkles and A Stove, Making Home Base, Naptime Creations, Southern Hospitality, Living Well Spending Less, Remodelaholic, The Happy Housie