Wooden Crate '57'

My love for boxes gets extended to crates, old wooden ones that had a solely functional purpose -like this one.
Made out of sturdy pinewood, quite big (57cm long, 27cm wide and 16cm deep) and with a lovely rustic feel. And quite dirty, too! On the sides, almost completely faded but still visible, the name of a factory in Galicia (in the north-west coast of Spain), and the fabrication date of, what I suppouse, the seafood cans that must have carried inside: 1954.

Even though I restored the crate with a distressed finish on the outside and, looking close, some traces can still be seen, there was no way to preserve the printings -so I decided to at least keep a reminder of that date, and painted the number 57 on both the long sides of the box. It also helps keeping the industrial look to the piece.

I have reinforced the bottom adapting three slats of a small pallet, treated the wood, added two iron handles on the sides and four white casters to easily move it. The numbers and the inside are painted on a warm mustard tone, the outside in distressed off-white. Now it is still a practical and useful crate (great to keep magazines, toys, blankets and so), but attractive too!


Some pictures of the crate, prior its transformation. On the right, the print on one side with the making date ("Fcion. 1957") that would give me the idea to paint the number 57 on the sides.
Below, the upside-down trademark -it was too faded, the legible parts read "Industrias Gallegas S. A[...] Marín (Pon[tevedra)]" Cute! Shame that it was impossible to keep it.

And here, the making process, step by step: First, a thorough cleaning and complete sanding of both the crate and the pallet slats,
Treating the wood, sanding the tips of some of the nails (they had pierced the surface at some points),
'Dry-painting' the outside of the crate with a self-made off white, and mixing the colours for the mustard tone in the inside
Nailing the slats in the bottom (and reinforcing the whole structure where needed), then sanding the off-white coat to get a distressed finish
Painting the number 57 on both long sides of the crate, varnishing (and polishing the whole piece, not shown)
Polishing the iron handles, and finally fastening the hardware: handles and casters
 

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