Choosing color and style for faux painting your home. Debra Conrad THAT Painte Lady answers your questions about decorating, style and painting your home.
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I have just signed up for your newsletter, so I don't know if you have already covered this.
I want to paint my bedroom to look like an aged, yellow-mottled hacienda.
My walls are not stucco, nor adobe, but drywall. I have seen this look done on drywall, just not a clue how it is achieved.
I assume that a light shade of yellow is painted on, then perhaps a darker glaze is applied either ocker or brown?
How is the mottled look achieved?
What colors do I use to get this look? I want it to look Mexican like, Spanish like, adobe like. Can you help me?
Edith Griffith
Well Edith… you have come to the right place for this question. My long time newsletter readers know that I love the Mexican Spanish Hacienda style… and have remodeled my home to reflect that style.
Now… I should get down to the answer, huh?
To get a Mexican style use creamy beige as the base coat… using yellow as a base will create a Tuscan look… not Spanish.
Then the the faux painting technique is applied. Ocher color is yellow… so we don't want to use that.
Use a faux glaze made with burnt sienna. This is a warm brown… like chocolate.
Because the walls are not textured you are going to have to get the textured, worn look with the paint. The idea is to faux glaze the wall with a color wash first… then do a second coat with something that will create a texture.
I use a combination of sea sponge and Woolie pad to create texture. It's a pouncing motion, instead of a wiping motion.
This entry was posted on Friday, May 2nd, 2008 at 11:00 pm and is filed under Painting Techniques. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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One Response to “How To Get Aged Walls Paint Ideas”
I achieved the Tuscan look in my billiards room with smooth walls by doing a glazing technique and 3-color washing, including one metallic gold color using a dry brush to age the colors together. For the “cracks” I simply tore scrap book pages on the diagonal, held them against the wall, and using a small amount of the darker color on a brush, dabbed to almost dry on a towel, brushed against the edges, then removing the ripped paper, used a dry brush going first away from the “crack” and then toward it, ended up with a Tuscan look, which I have submitted to The Painter Lady as an example.
June 22nd, 2008 at 9:49 am
I achieved the Tuscan look in my billiards room with smooth walls by doing a glazing technique and 3-color washing, including one metallic gold color using a dry brush to age the colors together. For the “cracks” I simply tore scrap book pages on the diagonal, held them against the wall, and using a small amount of the darker color on a brush, dabbed to almost dry on a towel, brushed against the edges, then removing the ripped paper, used a dry brush going first away from the “crack” and then toward it, ended up with a Tuscan look, which I have submitted to The Painter Lady as an example.