This is a departure from my usual food posts, but you know I had to share this fun little upcycle project that my guy and I tackled this month – a play kitchen that we made from an old entertainment center.

DIY play kitchen made from an old entertainment center | Kitchen Treaty #upcycle

If you’ve read anything from my blog before, you probably know I am the proud mama of a young, busy toddler. My gal is nearly two years old, and I’ve been wanting to help her get her mitts on a play kitchen, well, pretty much from the time she started walking.

Fueled by Pinterest, a discarded entertainment center, and the grandiose notion that we have more talent – and time – than we actually had, we decided that Santa was going deliver an upcycled play kitchen this Christmas.

We started out with this behemoth. Actually, there were some lovely smoked glass doors on the left, but by the time I took this “before” photo, they were long gone.

DIY Play Kitchen from Entertainment Center | Kitchen Treaty

We sanded it and we painted it and, with a jigsaw, cut a hole where the sink was going to be. We bought a piece of plywood for the back (Lowe’s cut it for us for free), and also cut to size a wooden refrigerator “door.” My husband used a router to round the edges of the fridge door, and to bevel the edges of the oven window (which, by the way, is simply a $3 piece of 8″ x 10″ plexiglass).

DIY Play Kitchen from Entertainment Center | Kitchen Treaty

This one lonely photo is all I have for “in progress” shots. Things were entering panic mode right around this time – I think I took this photo on December 23. And at midnight on Christmas eve, we were still working on it. Did I mention we have a tendency to bite off more than we can chew?!

Anyway, here is the finished product.

DIY Play Kitchen from Entertainment Center | Kitchen Treaty

Yay! We finished it by the skin of our teeth.

I’ll throw a few details out there, just in case you’re thinking of tackling one of these on your own:

  • This will take you much more time than you think it will.
  • Even if you’re being super diligent about keeping your costs low, it will probably cost you nearly as much as a store-bought play kitchen.
  • If you have the romantic notion that this will be a fun little project to work on with your spouse and it will be all fun and sweet hanging out in the garage applying paint and laughing gaily, well … good luck with that. 😉 If you’re anything like us, one of you will probably end up doing about 90% of the work. The other one may or may not cry at some point over the whole endeavor. You probably don’t need more than one guess to know who’s who (my guy did an incredible job building this thing).
  • The “window” is an 8″ x 10″ picture frame with a photo of Yosemite compliments of Costco’s Art & Image Gallery. Our daughter has been obsessing a bit over waterfalls ever since we went to see one near here. And it was one of the first things she noticed!
  • The curtains are an old scrap of Ikea material. I was going to make them out of red and white gingham until I came across this piece in my fabric bin. They’re about 18″ long and about two feet wide. They were a little too wide, but a little emergency baker’s twine tied them up nicely.
  • The color is Benjamin Moore Herb Bouquet 460 (I found it in the mismatched paint section of a local hardware store). Gotta say, I expected the color to be much darker/deeper, and I’m a little disappointed that it ended up so light. But the price was right, and Miss Thing doesn’t seem to mind.
  • Chalkboard paint, on the inside and the outside of the fridge door. Totally worth the tiny extra bit of effort. She loves it.
  • I wanted to paint a faux “countertop” to make it more realistic, and even paint the back kitchen “wall” a different color, but, yeah. No time.
  • We got the stove knobs and the faucet knobs at local hardware stores, making sure there weren’t any choking-hazard-size pieces that could come off. My guy screwed them on in a way that allows them to still turn. I … wish I could be more descriptive but if you’re reading this and have a question about that, leave a comment and he’ll chime in.
  • The faucet is a $3.50 thrift store find. New faucets are expensive! I had no idea.
  • The sink is a $5 metal bowl from TJ Maxx. Metal dog bowls work great too.
  • The stove top is simply a painted gray square. The “burners” are little wood sunshines that we picked up at Michael’s craft store, spray-painted glossy black and glued on.
  • The oven? Well, it still needs some work. The door is a little heavy and could fall on her foot. Our temporary fix was to add a chain so it doesn’t drop all the way to the floor. Unfortunately, she also likes to sit and stand on the oven door, and not even 24 hours later, one of the hinges is bent, and the other one has already had to be replaced. We are thinking of finding some different hinges or just moving the hinges back to the left so it can just swing open to the side. Not as realistic, but safer.
  • The oven “rack” is a wire cooling rack straight from my cupboard of kitchen supplies. I’ve been wanting some new ones, so that worked out perfectly! The rack makes a satisfying metal “clang” when she bakes her “pizza.”
  • The oven light is just a battery-powered push light. I love how she can see things “baking” through the oven window.
  • We need to add a light above the sink and oven area. Maybe a cute little chandelier. It can be a little dark.
  • Ikea sells great little play metal pots and pans and utensils. Daiso is where I got the metal mugs and bowls you can see above the fridge.
  • I screwed up the spacing of the stuff on the gallery wall on the right. It was 1 a.m. Christmas morning and we were exhausted. It pains me every time I look at it. There’s also a streak of Gorilla Glue under the ladybug that you can see if you look closely. Ugh. Give yourself ample time!

DIY Play Kitchen from Entertainment Center | Kitchen Treaty

Our little gal loves her new kitchen. She calls it her “house.”

DIY Play Kitchen from Entertainment Center | Kitchen Treaty

And us? Well … we are THRILLED to be done. And, yeah – pretty proud of ourselves, too. And more than a little surprised that Santa actually finished it on time and was able to deliver.

Let the air coffee sipping and wooden pizza nibbling begin!

This post may contain affiliate links, which means if you click on a link and make a purchase, I may receive a portion of the proceeds. More about this here.