DIY Painted Adirondack Chairs

Last year at Haven I won a set of gorgeous Adirondack chairs from Thompson’s WaterSeal! Unfortunately, we were still living in our tiny apartment at the time, so I offered them to my parents instead. The next time I made it out to CA to visit them, my mom and I decided to paint them, and look how they turned out!

DIY Painted Adirondack Chairs: Painting Adirondack chairs is way easier than you might think!

Painting Adirondack chairs is way easier than you might think; plus when you paint them yourself, you can make all sorts of fun patterns and designs! We painted by hand with brushes, but you could easily spray paint them if you’d rather.

Painted Adirondack Chairs

Here’s what you need to paint wooden Adirondack chairs:

If your Adirondack chair is already put together, take it apart as much as you can. This will make it easier to paint each piece thoroughly. Luckily, these chairs shipped in pieces with assembly instructions and hardware, so it was easy to paint everything before we put it all together.

If your chair has any rough spots, start by sanding them down. You want a smooth surface for the primer to adhere to.

Once your pieces are smooth, prime them. Primer will help the paint stick to the chairs and cover better, and it will help seal the chairs so the paint job isn’t ruined when you leave them outside in the rain.

Cover each piece, front and back, with a good coat of primer. Then set the pieces aside to dry.

Painted Adirondack Chairs

Once the primer is dry, grab a paintbrush and start painting with color! You will probably need two coats of paint to thoroughly cover the primer, so don’t worry if the paint is a little light or you see primer showing through on the first coat. After the first coat we noticed some light streaks on the arms of the chair (see photo below), but after the second coat, the streaks were completely covered!

Painted Adirondack Chairs-4

It goes faster if you have help! Once you’re done with your first coat of paint, set the pieces aside to let them dry.

Painted Adirondack Chairs-2

We moved the pieces up to the patio to do the second coat of paint because the giant oak tree in the middle of my parents back yard dropped a ton of leaves on the pieces as they were drying!

For your second coat, make sure to go over any light spots or streaks, and brush along the grain again with light strokes to help reduce visible brush strokes in your paint.

Let the pieces dry again. This may take longer than the first two times because there’s more paint on the wood at this point!

Painted Adirondack Chairs-5

If you’re worried about it, you can seal the pieces with a clear sealant once the second coat of paint is dry. But if you use good quality exterior primer and paint like we did, that should be enough to seal the chairs.

Once the paint is dry, assemble your chairs!

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Once you have it all put together, sit back and enjoy your painted Adirondack chairs!

DIY Painted Adirondack Chairs: Painting Adirondack chairs is way easier than you might think!

The photo of the single chair above was taken right after we finished the project, but my mom actually took the photo of both chairs together just last weekend, a year after we painted them. They’ve gotten a little dirty over the past year, but the paint job has held up perfectly even though they’ve been outside the whole time!!!

DIY Painted Adirondack Chairs: Painting Adirondack chairs is way easier than you might think!

It looks like the painted birdhouse has held up too!

Do you have Adirondack chairs on your deck or patio? Now that we own a house, we need to get a pair for our yard!

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Jessi Wohlwend

I believe that anyone can do crafts and DIY projects, regardless of skill or experience. I love sharing simple craft ideas, step by step DIY project tutorials, cleaning hacks, and other tips and tricks all with one goal in mind: giving you the tools you need to “do it yourself”, complete fun projects, and make awesome things!

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Reader Interactions

  1. Charles Dixon says

    3 years ago

    Was wondering how much paint you used? I’d like to paint 3 chairs and wondering if a gallon would be enough or maybe more than I need. I plan on painting them Benjamin Moore Van Busen blue to match my front door as I intend to place them in my new front yard paver patio. Thanks for the article!

    • Jessi Wohlwend says

      3 years ago

      I think a gallon should be enough for 3 chairs, unless you need to do a lot of additional coats. Some woods really soak up the paint and others don’t, so if you want the color to be really bold and vivid, I might also get a gallon of primer and do that first—that way you probably only need to do one coat of paint.

  2. Vanessa says

    10 years ago

    Such a lovely color combination!

  3. Crystal says

    10 years ago

    Super cute! Love the bright colors!!

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