Sometimes we have to think outside of the box when we want to re-use a piece of architectural salvage, and sometimes we don't. On this page, you will find our products being put to work in traditional and out-of-the-ordinary ways. An eclectic room using elegant materials that are both refined and rustic all at once, being allowed to show their age and pieced-together appeal. WHAT? Salvaged pressed-tin ceiling, brass light fixtures, leaded-glass windows, trim, and heart pine bead board. WHERE? Pinch of the Past's Greensboro, GA location. A salvaged balustrade from our shop finds a new home across the loft of a north Georgia cabin. With the paint stripped and a finish added to match the home's original knotty-pine, one would think it had always been there! WHAT? A restored wooden balustrade. WHERE? A residence in Greensboro, Georgia. | A bold statement in a lavatory using pressed tin ceiling panels on the walls - clear coated just as they were found. This versatile look could even be made formal by stripping the pressed tin and bead board, and giving it a smooth new coat of paint. The old enameled iron sink could even be placed on top of a wooden table or lowboy for a console sink with storage! WHAT? Salvaged pressed-tin ceiling, 1920s enameled sink, stripped and clear-coated steel medicine cabinet, nickel plated scallop-shell soap dish, and heart pine bead board. WHERE? Pinch of the Past's Greensboro, GA location. An antique 5-panel heart pine door - stripped, sanded, & set in a frame - becomes a queen-size headboard! |












