How's this for a first post?
I have gathered something like a gallon of pennies throughout the years. They're pretty unusable as currency and I was too lazy to bring them to a bank. I was also cursed with two rather ugly bathroom counters of a mustard yellow persuasion and have been looking for an inexpensive way to redo them. Penny counter top tutorials pictures are everywhere on the internet, so I decided to tackle it.
I started by sorting out my pennies into light and dark hues. I have plans for these later, but if you want to go with a randomized look, you can skip this step.
Time to tackle the counter itself.
Here's the counter in the master bathroom. This is about as good as it ever looks, which isn't saying much. (Bonus kitty photobomb.)
I taped off the entire area that I was going to be painting/resin-ing. This made clean-up super easy at the end of the project and left my walls as clean as when I started.
I painted the entire counter top with black acrylic paint and then used a clear coat of spray sealer and let dry overnight. It's important to let everything dry in between steps. If you add pennies to the paint too soon, it is likely to pull up and peel. Touching up the ripped paint is a pain. I used a basic decoupage medium to hold the pennies in place while I was adding to the rows. I anchored the first row with a stronger craft glue.
This is after the resin pour. I used Envirotex Lite 2-part resin for this. It is designed specifically as a varnish/sealer and self-levels after pouring. Make sure to measure and mix your resin carefully as messing up either the ratio or leaving parts unmixed can result in your counter not curing appropriately. (And then you get to buy a new counter.)
The counter needs at least 24 hours to soft cure and up to 72 to for a hard cure. Avoid putting objects on the counter before 72 hours, but you can touch it as soon as it is soft cured.
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