The Round Cottage

Creating a home that's inviting

  • About
  • Our Cedar Dome
    • Room by Room
      • Children’s bedrooms
      • Living Space
    • Rustic cottage decor
    • The garden
  • DIY
    • Before & After Big projects
    • Handicrafting
  • Hospitality
    • Hosting From Your Home
      • Meal trains
    • Recipes
  • FREE EBOOK

in Before/After· Hospitality· Living room· Rustic cottage decor

Repurposing a mid-1800’s knockdown

Repurpose a mid-1800’s knockdown for that perfect large storage piece! Here’s how we found ours for FREE and how we are using it now!

Most everything I know I learn from my sister-n-laws. I joke with them we need to do a sisters podcast together so others, like me, can glean all the amazing things they know and could share. I always feel more refreshed in my mothering and come away feeling more knowledgeable no matter what we discuss. We just have a lot of fun together, too.

Some of my sister n laws live farther up North, but I have one nearby and our families do a lot together. She fills her home with amazing antiques, decor, and so many good books. She has many great collections of classic colored plates (green, blue, browns, and the red for all the occasions.) Typically when I’m over there I’m looking at anything new she may have added or that I myself want to be on the hunt for. It’s one of my favorite places to spy out new pieces to add to my “treasures to find list.”

One of those things for a while has been a knockdown. She actually has two beautiful knockdowns that she got for some pretty great deals. They are beautiful and large and can hold so many things in them.

large wooden armoire knockdown with tiny framed picture of a church next to it.

knockdown: the act or the instance of knocking down (The Free Dictionary)

This is my take on a knockdown and probably my best Example of one:

If you get one that dates around or near the mid-1800s. The name comes from being able to take it apart (knock-down.) When a family in the pioneer days was going across the Oregan trail or moving to another area to build a new cabin and life, they had to fit everything they owned or wanted to take in their covered Wagon. Most families owned at least one knockdown wardrobe because they hold a lot and can easily come apart. The back, the doors, and the sides of the wardrobe would easily slide on the floor of the wagon and not take much space at all for how large these can be. When they eventually made it to their destination, the knockdown would just be pieced back together. They usually used their knockdowns for a pantry or linen/clothing closet.

I like a lot of the furniture we buy to close, I know open shelving has been popular for years but I keep that to a minimum because it does not function well for our family (or my organizational skills.)

Put the art and crafting supplies in and close. Place the school mess and books in, then I can close it. Put the towels and extra sheets in something: That I can close. I love things with lids also. Like baskets, cute containers or boxes. It just helps keep the clutter down. I can close that mess of colors and leave behind a beautiful exposed walnut or pine wood to view. Or colors I actually enjoy seeing, I can display those on fabric boxes or curtains in blues, greens, or grays or something I find extra pleasing to my eyes. A knockdown is just one of my dream pieces because of all that exposed wood and all that large amount of storage.

wood door full of games on the shelving.
(Our knockdown) Primitive inner look with our games stored on one side of our knockdown. We keep blankets and more schooling supplies on the other side.

An old knockdown has been on my “treasure to find list” for awhile. I’ve specifically been searching on craigslist and marketplace on Facebook. When I’m really trying to find something, then I’m searching it every day or every other day. Typing it in while I’m checking messages or emails at least once, maybe a couple times a day. Waiting for the one! A good deal is finding a large beautiful knockdown for $300 or less. I see some really beautiful and ornate ones for $600+ in pristine condition even though they are probably 120+ years old. It also depends on what style, wood, and condition. Some can be pretty beaten up. But mostly, you can tell if they look like they could hold up and be useful for what you need.

I wanted mine to be a little primitive (they usually always are on the inside anyway) and a dark color (walnut would be great but that can be challenging to get or you may have to put in a bid fight for it with others.) We needed something for our games and puzzles to go in so they no longer would be hanging out in an open wire basket in the library anymore. We also have some extra blankets we’ve been needing to store for when not in use. A knockdown provides plenty of space to hold a lot of items so they are quite multi purposeful.

Finding the piece

pieces of wood in a library of book and leather couch
Getting ready to piece the knockdown together just like the pioneers did…right? I’m sure they picked a more suitable spot to piece theirs’ together.

The day finally came that someone across the river had one for FREE. What?!? IT was a bit unbelievable. She posted a mock photo of a knockdown and what she ‘thought’ it could look like all together. Her’s was in pieces and she said she had them all. So we basically would be piecing it together like a puzzle and hoping all the pieces would actually be there and that it would be something we could work with. We were first to message and quickly ran and grabbed it that evening. We got it home and it was in some rough condition on one of the doors but all in all seemed quite nice and decent quality.

Follow the photos below for a walkthrough of us piecing it together:

front doors to an 1850's old and uncleaned knockdown.
The front doors of the knockdown. All the boards for the back laying to the side. There was still a drawer to go under these as well. It took the whole floor space up and showed how tall it was.We ended up taking those handles off because I was hoping to seek an old key hole which WAS indeed there! I prefer to have those exposed more.
knockdown front doors with drawer on carpeted floor
The doors with the drawer in place. The original knobs you can see here and I would of liked to save those but one was broken so we ended up getting little gold ones instead of trying to find a match which may of taken a lot of time.
lots of wood pieces pieced together for an old knockdown and a wall of library books behind it
The inner pieces being pieced together! The back is facing us here and we were just about to place the boards across the whole back.
exposed and outer and inner wood of a knockdown wardrobe
We got the boards placed on the back then the door pieces put on the front! You can see a small primitive hole in the upper left corner and I love it. Character! You can also see more of the primitive look on the inside of these. If they are old, they most always look rough on the inside.
wooden drawer with hand putting in a gold knob
Lastly, placed the new knobs on the drawer.Then we moved it to its final place.

Iron nails for keeping your piece looking it’s age:

We got it all put together, we did redo the nails but would like to eventually replace the ones we used with the iron square ones like these.

They typically had those old iron square nails placed to hold it together which can also help date it. Beware some though, because you can find them again, new, to make a newer piece of furniture look older. That comes in handy for refurbishing something actually old but you don’t want to be deceived either. We just got two new small gold knobs for the drawer.

wooden drawer with a single gold knob

How to clean and shine your wood piece up:

wood antique knockdown
We cleaned it up with Murphy wood cleaner. We were missing the bottom piece for a bit and thought it didn’t come with it. BUT thankfully it turned up being still in the van!

My sister n law recommended this Murphy wood cleaner. It cleans and restores old wood. You can use it for many things or even kitchen cabinets. It’s highly concentrated so a bottle will take you far. It got our knockdown all shiny and it started coming alive. We could really start seeing its true color and guessing on what kind of wood it may be. I really loved it after the new knobs were finally in place.

Before/After with the cleaner:

wood knockdown in library
Before the wood oil…
wood knockdown with library
…after the wood oil.

We eventually got her moved to the living room and she truly makes a statement. I would love to keep it in the library or just a wall headed into a main room. But because its so tall and most of the house being a geodome, the walls are to short or rounded for a knockdown or anything tall to go anywhere else. It for sure gives a more timeless feel to an otherwise average living room.

living room with large gray blue wraparound couch, wood burning stove, tv, armor and knockdown and tiled floor
With our furniture and geodome home we have to get creative where we can place tall furniture. The living room was the spot. One day the tv will be placed behind some doors once we do a built in. but for now this brings the old back in with the new.

This is why you keep finding old things, even if you live in a newer or modern home. These old pieces bring a coziness and make a room feel warmer than anything you can buy at the big box stores.

I added some baskets on top and stuck all our wool felting supplies inside them. You can find the ones I purchased here. They were the prettiest baskets I could find at Walmart that day and I love the hyacinth weaving along with the fun shape.

2 large hyacinth boat baskets onto a wooden armor or knockdown

Hope this makes you want to go find one for your own storage needs in your home or to clean one up or save one for fun! This is one of my favorite styles of furniture! I hope to find another eventually to keep all our linens in for our master bedroom! It’s on my “treasures to find list!” What’s on yours?

wooden knockdown with hyacinth baskets on top and an antique table next to a window
I think she needs a name!

Check out these posts from the blog, if you enjoyed this, you may also enjoy these:

5 small ways to make our home feel inviting

Rifle Paper Co. peel and stick wallpaper Review

DIYs Children’s Mud Kitchen

Pin this on one of your boards of things that would give you enjoyment! I have quite some pretty ones saved on my board!

wood wardrobe knockdown for pin with window and antique table

8 Comments

Previous Post: « Rifle Paper Co. peel and stick wallpaper Review

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Brad MacAonghais says

    September 22, 2022 at 10:32 pm

    This is amazing! This would probably be on our bucket list of things to do together. We’ve done a couple big projects like this and are always super proud of their work at the end. Your job looks lovely

    Reply
  2. Charlene says

    September 23, 2022 at 2:19 am

    What a beautiful piece of furniture! We are working on a lot of our own DIY projects, so this gives us inspiration!

    Reply
  3. Micheon says

    September 23, 2022 at 4:39 am

    Amazing! I love this so much!

    Reply
  4. Julie says

    September 23, 2022 at 4:42 pm

    Oh my gosh, you have my heart. I love this. I have been looking for a knock-down wardrobe for ages now it feels… I love your idea to repurpose it for game storage, too. This house we live in has zero built-in storage so I am always looking for unique ways to incorporate pieces that work well.

    Reply
  5. Alison says

    September 29, 2022 at 9:00 pm

    You did such a great job! I love this <3

    Reply
  6. Brad MacAonghais says

    September 29, 2022 at 10:35 pm

    I would be obligated to put some sort of child safety thing on that though and tell me kids that they aren’t allowed to go to Narnia..

    Reply
  7. Genevieve says

    September 30, 2022 at 3:14 am

    Love repurposing old pieces…especially when they help keep our home organized! Great job!

    Reply
  8. Rebekah says

    October 11, 2022 at 5:20 pm

    What a great post! I love your style and how it turned out.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




Primary Sidebar

Let’s Connect!

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • YouTube

Welcome!

girl with a snowy tree filled background

HI! I’m Lindsey , mama to 6, & wife to quite a good DIY’er and master tiler. Follow along as we go space by space making our little dome home welcoming and cozy for our family and guests alike. Read more about me here.

Subscribe

Join our cottage community here!

Recent Comments

  1. Rebekah on Repurposing a mid-1800’s knockdown
  2. Genevieve on Repurposing a mid-1800’s knockdown
  3. Brad MacAonghais on Repurposing a mid-1800’s knockdown
  4. Alison on Repurposing a mid-1800’s knockdown
  5. Julie on Repurposing a mid-1800’s knockdown

Archives

  • September 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022

Categories

  • Before/After
  • Building
  • Children's bedrooms
  • DIY
  • Exterior
  • Gardening
  • handicrafts
  • Hospitality
  • Hosting
  • Living room
  • Living Space
  • Our Cedar Dome
  • projects
  • Recipes
  • Rustic cottage decor
  • The garden

Copyright © 2025 · Market Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in