Published December 28, 2016
#customerproject / #DIY / remodel
Customer Project: Green Home Remodel
One of our customers completed a large-scale home renovation using over 75% of their materials from Second Use Seattle!
Read full postOne of our customers completed a large-scale home renovation using over 75% of their materials from Second Use Seattle!
Read full postSeattle-based artist John L’esperance recently created a series of mixed-media sculptures assembled from reclaimed Foundry Patterns. L’esperance describes himself as “an artist in the Outsider tradition, unschooled and self-trained, utilizing found objects and reclaimed materials to construct multi-dimensional, mixed media art pieces that offer a fresh new vernacular.
Read full postSeattle Upcycle artist Russ Morgan submitted this striking Coke Bottle Chandelier that he was commissioned to make for a client.
Read full postIf you are nostalgic for the “I Spy” books that graced the bookshelves of most 90’s era children, you’ll get a kick out of Marianne’s “Seek and Find Table.”
Read full postMrs. Gamze Shidler brought her bathroom out of the 1980s and into the 21st century with a clean, modern update that used salvaged cabinets and counter tops from the Second Use store.
Read full postSecond Use customer Warren and their son collaborated on a remodel that infused a small powder room with retro charm without sacrificing clean, timeless style.
Read full postSecond Use Customer Carma Gael created this striking coat rack and shelf from a foundry pattern they purchased at the Second Use store. Although they were originally looking for a worn piece of wood to give the coat rack an industrial feel, they “knew they were on to something” when they stumbled across the wealth of foundry patterns at the store.
Read full postLongtime contributor Eric Martinez shows us his latest project: a purple heart coffee table with hand forged hairpin legs.
Read full postCustomer Andrew Kutz created two live edge benches and a coffee table from reclaimed lumber purchased at Second Use.
Read full postThis Second User turns a closet door into a potting bench for the garden!
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