Antique Empire Dresser & Mirror — Sligh Furniture Co. Stain Revival
A genuine American antique — solid mahogany Empire chest with a tilting mirror, original brass hardware, and a Sligh Furniture Co. maker's label still intact inside the drawer — brought back with a warm gray-brown stain that earns its place in a modern bedroom.
Project context
Empire furniture — the American take on the Neoclassical style popular from roughly 1820 to 1860 — is defined by its architectural weight: heavy cornice lines, scroll or scroll-foot bases, bold column or pilaster details, and large unbroken drawer fronts that let the wood grain speak. This piece, made by the Sligh Furniture Company of Grand Rapids, Michigan, carries all of those markers with the added refinement of a tilting mirror on S-scroll uprights.
Sligh pieces are not common resale finds. Grand Rapids was the furniture manufacturing capital of America through much of the 19th and early 20th centuries, and Sligh's reputation for quality solid wood construction means pieces like this one show up with real structural integrity still intact — often needing only surface revival, not structural rebuilding.
The challenge
The original surface had darkened and muddied over decades — the mahogany was still structurally sound, but the tone had closed up, making the grain invisible and the piece feel heavier and older than it needed to. The scroll feet and original brass keyhole escutcheons on the drawers were period-correct and worth preserving exactly as found.
The tilting mirror assembly — attached via knurled adjustment knobs through the S-scroll uprights — needed careful handling to clean and refinish without disturbing the original mechanical action or leaving drip lines at the joint.
The solution
A warm gray-brown stain direction was chosen to open the grain back up without stripping the piece of its natural depth. Mahogany responds well to this kind of tone correction — the reddish-brown warmth of the wood reads through the gray, creating a finish that sits somewhere between a modern restoration and the original character the piece was built with.
The brass hardware was cleaned and polished in place rather than replaced. Original aged brass has a patina that new hardware cannot replicate — replacing it would have cost the piece its credibility. The Sligh maker's label inside the center drawer was protected throughout the process and remains legible.
Send photos before you decide what to do with it.
A few clear photos — full front, any labels, damage areas, and a size reference — let us tell you what direction the piece can take and roughly what it costs to get there.
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