Posts Tagged ‘crackling’

Decorative and Faux Painting Is Fun But Don’t Start Until You Read This

I think decorative and faux painting techniques look great, are fun to do, and add a personal statement to a room. I’ve been adding my personal look to the walls in my homes ever since my husband and I purchased our first “fixer-upper.”

When I first starting using faux and decorative painting techniques on the walls in our home it was a financially motivated action. We didn’t have a lot of extra money. I couldn’t afford new furniture or flooring for a room but I could afford to buy some paint. But just painting the walls a solid color seemed boring to me so I started exploring faux and decorative painting. It didn’t take me long to get hooked. Why do I like faux and decorative painting on walls so much?

1) It’s an inexpensive way to change the look of an entire room. Paint is the most economical way to change the look of a room.

2) A painting technique on the walls minimizes and hides cosmetic flaws such as surface cracks and less than perfect patching jobs.

3) It’s easy to change when you’re sick of it. Repainting a room that has paint on the walls is a whole lot easier and much less time consuming than stripping wallpaper off walls and preparing those walls for paint.

4) It adds your own personal look and style to a space. Color and texture are fun and interesting. An entire home painted the same off-white color is dull and boring to me. A faux painting technique can evoke any mood you want in a room whether it’s a Tuscan look, retro 70′s look, a country look, something elegant, a cheery bright look for a child’s room, or any other look you want.

5) The choices of techniques and paints are nearly endless. Some of the more popular technique choices include: sponging, ragging, dragging, color washing, stenciling, crackling, marbling, gilding, wood-graining, spattering, feather-dusting, and stippling. You could also use one of the specialty paint products on the market today such as Venetian plaster to create the look you want or buy a faux painting kit such as a Woolie painting kit to help make your project as fun and easy as possible.

While I highly recommend faux or decorative painting, there are a few things I’ve learned since I’ve started faux painting that I’d like to share with you. Some of these items are things to “not do” that I’ve learned the hard way. Others are tips and suggestions that were helpful to me.

1) Go to your local paint store or decorative painting store and look at the samples they have. For example, Home Depot has lots of different booklets and paint chips with faux paint finishes on them for you to look at and even take home to look at in your lighting. That pretty metallic finish on a paint chip in the store make look garish when you get it home and look at it in your home’s natural lighting.

2) Consider taking a class before doing your first project. Some paint stores and home improvement stores, such as Home Depot, offer free faux painting clinics and workshops. You can also find some very good faux painting classes for a reasonable fee by looking in your local paper or doing an Internet search.

3 Practice your technique on a piece of scrap wallboard before doing it on your wall. This is especially important if you are blending colors. A few years ago my son wanted his bedroom painted. He wanted me to use a Woolie (a great faux painting tool available at most paint supply stores) to blend together a burgundy and a caramel color. Each color looked great by itself, but when they got blended together too much a dark fuchsia color emerged. And anything resembling pink was not something my son wanted on his wall!

Because I had been faux painting for years I didn’t listen to my own advice about trying the technique on a piece of scrap board first nor did I buy sample sizes of paint to try out. I bought gallons because I wanted to save time. Luckily the store agreed to exchange the paint for me free of charge but we did have to paint over a wall and wait for it to dry before starting over with new colors.

4) Remember that the texture of your walls will dictate, to some extent, what faux painting techniques you can and cannot use. If your walls are smooth you can do just about any technique you want. But textured walls are very common, especially in newer homes. You may see striped walls in a brochure or on a sample wall and decide that’s what you want to do in your home; but if your walls are textured it’s going to be nearly impossible to achieve straight lines for your stripes. Keep in mind that faux finishes on paint chips from a store are done on a smooth surface. They will look a little different (but may still look very nice) if you do that same technique with the same colors on a textured wall.

5) If you’re going to do a faux technique in an entire room don’t start on the wall that people will first look at when they walk into the room. That means don’t start on the wall directly across from the doorway. Unless you’re a professional, it takes a little while for you to get your technique perfected in a room. Put that less than perfect start in the least noticeable part of the room.

6) If you get tired while painting and need a break, don’t stop in the middle of a wall. Stop at a corner. If you stop in the middle of the wall and don’t come back to work on the project again until after the paint is dry, you’re going to have a noticeable line on the wall. It won’t be pretty.

7) Think twice about mixing your own color with paint you have at home unless you are absolutely positive you’re going to have enough paint to do the entire job. If you mix your own color and run out of paint before you finish it will be time-consuming and challenging to match that color. You might be able to match it because many paint stores have specialty machines that can match a paint chip you take in, but if you’ve mixed together two different sheens of paint (for example let’s say you mixed a flat paint and a satin paint together) you’re going to have a hard time reproducing that same sheen. In some cases it may not be noticeable; but in other cases it will.

Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by wescap - September 21, 2009 at 7:13 am

Categories: Faux Finishing   Tags: , ,

Faux Finishes with Acrylic Paints

The word ‘faux’ is a French word meaning fake or false. Faux finishing is the painting of a surface in such a way as to imitate the appearance of the actual object.

The history of faux finishing goes back many years to early days in Pompeii when artists painted faux stones. During the Renaissance period, Europe grasped the idea and formed two faux painting schools. At that time, a beginner studied and practiced for ten years or more to perfect the techniques. The results were (and still are) so precise that it was often nearly impossible to distinguish between the real finish and the faux finish.

Faux finishing to resemble marble has from that time to this been a very popular finish to duplicate. In fact, marble is the most popular stone to imitate. Faux marble can be used in many places where genuine marble cannot be used because of its heavy weight and high cost. A faux finish of marble is fairly easy to duplicate with the correct paints and tools. In fact, one can purchase a faux finishing kit which contains everything needed to imitate a marble finish.

There are many faux finishing techniques one can learn. Granite is another popular surface to
duplicate. Likewise, many varieties of wood finishes can be achieved through faux finishing methods. A piece of furniture may appear to be made of a design of various inlaid wood pieces when actually it may be a plain pine or other simple wood object, faux finished in great detail to resemble and imitate a handcrafted, carved piece of furniture.. A number of years ago I made several ‘antique’ rifles from plaster. After the ‘wood’ was painted with a walnut finish and the rest of the gun painted with a faux metal, from a short distance away these appeared very convincingly like the real thing. This did not take any special talent. I just had the correct equipment to create these faux finishes.

You can duplicate the look and finish of many metals with the proper paints and faux finishing techniques. Gold, silver, copper, bronze and lead can all be duplicated on wood, plaster, cement, plastic, metal – any paintable surface. And as hard as it is may be to believe, some craftspeople actually duplicate rust. Likewise, leather, tortoise shell and cork are popular items to imitate. There seems to be no limit to what can be accomplished with faux finishes.

Do you have a concrete floor that you want faux finished? You can paint it to look like brick, tile, stone, linoleum, wood, etc., with the proper faux finishing technique.

Occasionally, faux finishes can be applied to make new objects to be old or even antique, while others can make old objects appear to be new. Crackling, pickling, antiquing, smoking and spattering are just a few of the methods used to enhance a faux finish. You can find suitable items at thrift stores, flea markets, and yard sales that can be faux finished and ‘re-invented,’ so to speak. For example, an old wooden picture frame can be finished to look like a metal one. On the other hand, another frame can be painted to look like wood, even old barn siding. Decide what faux finish you like and go for it!

Linda Walter is a housewife, homemaker who loves arts and crafts. Born and raised in Ohio, she and her husband now live in Florida where she enjoys painting and several other crafts, along with caring for her Chihuahuas.

Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by wescap - August 12, 2008 at 1:30 pm

Categories: Faux Finishing   Tags: , , , ,

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