While I take as much care as possible with the items I've inherited, you can't fight salt air and ancient wiring (and kids and dogs and time). In addition, this lamp, with its Early American style key and brass, was made worse by the beaded shade that was in style for about a minute back in the early 2000's. Ugh.
To make matters worse, the brass was corroding - we are at least five miles from the ocean, but it's still a problem...:
I sanded the lamp thoroughly to remove all the rust and then used Rustoleum primer for metals - hopefully it will hold up well and prevent additional corrosion. Time will tell. I have black accents in the great room, so I decided to try a black lacquer paint that was suitable for metals. I was shocked how easily it covered and only two coats were necessary.
Once it was painted, I had to tackle the part that frightened me the most - rewiring the lamp. I bought a rewiring kit at Lowe's, but then when I went to look for barrel shades, I was shocked at the prices. Then, I stumbled across this great damaged lamp on clearance at Home Goods for $12.00 - the shade was the perfect shade of green to match the accents in my kitchen, AND it had a silver harp, which I thought would pop against the green and black. I used an eHow tutorial video and it's amazing how easy it is to fix a lamp!
Here are some "after" pictures (I DO need to find my digital camera - the iPhone pictures aren't cutting it.
The best compliment? My daughter said "mom, you're really rocking the house...."












I love, love, love this wall plaque made by blogger 




Please excuse the commercial photo, but my husband and I are traveling to celebrate our 24th wedding anniversary, and I didn't want to intrude on our night last night by taking pictures of chairs!! So, I found this one on-line. We ate last night at Aerie (amazing food by the way, if you're ever up at Grand Traverse Bay in Michigan). I love the way they've upholstered the chairs in a grey menswear solid on the front and bottom, and used a gorgeous print sparingly just on the backs. It prevents the print from entirely dominating the room. I may not be able to use that idea on my dining room chairs, but I have other chairs that will definitely work with that technique.





