What Color Do I Rag With to Tone Down Paint Color?

Here is a problem many of you might like to have an answer in your bag of tricks.  You have just painted your walls the perfect (you thought) color to co-ordinate with the tile on the floor and backsplash.  Once you have painted the entire room, it seems the color choice was a poor one.  What do you do?

A reader has sent in a call for help….

Hello, I am building a house, we choose the paint and tile.  Then we put them together in the masterbath, yuk.
The color of the wall is a golden color which is in the floor tile, but the tile next to the wall ( backplash) has a mix of small tile with lots of brown and bone colors. 
My question what colors to wash or rag colors on this golden color?  I thought toning down the gold with a bone color then adding random tan to brown.  or do I have to stay within the color palet of the golden color? 
Help.  I am in a quandery and am getting a headache.

The answer is to wash on (not rag off) a  watered down or glaze in off-white/pale cream.  This will -frost- the golden color.  If you try to add on darker colors they will seem to float on top of the gold and not blend.

The idea is to add this wash that will tone down the paint color without having to  paint the entire room again from scratch.

The trick is to get the wash to go on with a nice blended look.  This may take more that once around the room.  …. And I would suggest that you use a Woolie to apply and blend the finish.  You will also need a chip brush to get into the corners and ceiling line.  

Hope this helps to fix a few rooms and get rid on a few headaches!

 
 
Discussion

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6 comments
1.
On May 20th, 2007 at 8:09 pm, THAT Painter Lady said:

A recent question came in that was along the same lines as the question above:

On May 3, 2007 you addressed a painting situation…”toning down a paint color”…

The color was yellow/gold. I have bright orange walls that I would like to tone down to a burnt orange…

What technique/color paint/wash would I use?

I desperately hope you answer this question.

Thanks

2.
On May 20th, 2007 at 8:14 pm, THAT Painter Lady said:

On a bright orange wall that you want to faux paint and create a burnt orange color use a burnt umber wash.

You will find this color - Burnt Umber- In small 4 oz bottles at your local craft store. Mix this with a clear faux finishing liquid and water. All parts are equal. 1/3 water, 1/3 faux finish liquid, 1/3 paint.

If the mixture is too intense, add more of the water and faux finish liquid.

Pat this on with a woolie or rag. You will probably need to do two or more coats of this treatment to tone down the orange. It should come out a rusty orange color in the end.

Good Luck!
Debra Conrad
THAT Painter Lady

3.
On May 21st, 2007 at 6:19 am, Deidre Kibbe said:

I truly appreciate your response.

Can’t wait to try it.

Deidre

4.
On October 30th, 2007 at 8:50 pm, nancy hilpipre said:

HI i have recently painted my hallway yellow, with the lighting it looks bright yellow, how can I tone the yellow down, I have thought of sponge painting but not sure what color to use.

Hi Nancy…

The power of paint in small places! Amazing how a hallway magnifies paint color! Usually halls don’t have windows, so the lighting truly affects the color you choose.

If you love the color, but it is just toooo bright… you are wise to want to sponge over to tone it down. Sponging another layer is not only cheaper than applying another layer of paint… it is also much faster.

After you have carefully protected your floors, moldings, light fixtures and outlet covers… you may begin. This is a pretty messy technique so preparation is really key.

Purchase a small can of pale off white… not WHITE! Something creamy is good. You can water this down with just water, but I always recommend using a faux glaze in the mix. Some painters like to mix 1 part water, 1 part glaze and 1 part paint, but I just like to mix half glaze and half water… this gives you more working time.

Remember, even though you will be using this technique on all walls and ceiling… that you need to paint only one wall at a time. And - Start with the 5th wall the ceiling if you painted it yellow… (which is the designer way of decorating).

I would recommend that you use a Woolie to apply this liquid. It will give you a great soft texture… much better than a sponge. You can order them here:Woolie Lambwool Tool and you will get them in just a few days.

Hope this helps…

Debra

5.
On November 14th, 2007 at 7:43 pm, nancy hilpipre said:

Thanks Debra

6.
On August 7th, 2008 at 4:17 pm, Barbara said:

I used a burnt orange paint 3 parts water one part paint. It’s a little loud anyway to maybe mellow it out a little. Thanks so much

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