Does 'colonialised' have some different meaning according to its usage?

I know 'colonised' is used more often but that has a different meaning. Would you use 'colonialised' in a sentence to talk about "converting an item to look like its from the colonial era"?

For example: You are remodeling some furniture,say table and you want it to look like its from the colonial era. Can you use it in a sentence as "This table has been colonialised."

This doubt has been bugging me for some time and I know this question seems a bit odd.But, its my first question here and this website seems like the perfect place where I can get some decent explanation about it.

Not much explanation here:

Dictionary.com - Colonialization

Merriam-Webster - Colonialization


Colonialized would not be used in this case. "Colonial Style" would be better.

This is one of those dangerous words that has wildly different connotations depending on speaker and listener.

Straight forward: To have formed a colony -- an offshoot of the original culture in a new place.

Connotation: Hardship, privation. Suffer while building a new life.

Connotation: To assert that Our Way is the One True Path and Your Way is Trash

Connotation: To run roughshod over local cultures, killing, raping, destroying their culture.