A room painter’s primer
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Deciding on a paint color is stressful. Light, dark, bold, soothing:
Sometimes it’s hard to fit all of my moods into one can of color.
I believe in tester quarts and foam brushes. There are times when
rooms in my house have looked like patchwork quilts. It’s important
to see how the color adjusts to morning light, evening light and
artificial light.
After you have made the difficult color decision, you breathe a
sigh of relief and head off to the paint store -- only to be hit with
a new series of questions.
Latex or enamel? Flat, velvet, eggshell, semi-gloss, high-gloss,
marine gloss?
Many of these choices come down to personal preference. There are
shelves full of products that have been added over the years to meet
the needs of different applications, a paint for every occasion.
Here’s a heads-up before you head off to the paint store.
Latex vs. enamel: Latex is water-soluble. A little dish soap and
water are all you need for cleanup after your paint project. Latex
paints are good on surfaces that don’t get a lot of wear and tear:
walls and ceilings are good examples. Or maybe not?
If you have a flock of rugrats, latex may not be durable enough.
You need scrubable. Any enamel paint is thicker and more durable. For
high moisture areas, enamel stands alone. Enamel paints, especially
gloss varieties, are going to wick moisture better than water-based
counterparts.
Pretend to paint a couple rooms in your house. Start with a
bathroom. In a bathroom, it’s enamel all the way. Enamel doesn’t mean
that the entire bathroom has to be shiny. That’s where the different
finishes come into play. If you want flat, you can have it with
enamel.
In a bathroom, select a velvet or eggshell finish. These finishes
are not glossy, but they’re not flat. They give you a surface that’s
easy to wipe down, which every bathroom needs to avoid moisture
streaks. The woodwork in your bathroom is what gets punished.
High-use areas are also high-moisture areas. Look at your bathroom
cabinets. I’ll bet that there are certain drawers (like the
toothpaste drawer) that look more “loved” than others. Maybe the
cabinet underneath the sink is your well-worn area. Any place that
water drips or has wet hands using it needs enamel paint.
Using a semi-gloss or high-gloss product will help repel the water
that comes with the bathroom. Marine paint is more expensive, but
hey, if they use it on boats, your bathroom or kitchen cabinets will
weather the storm nicely, too.
Now, paint the walls. Consider your audience. If you are painting
a child’s room, you want walls that can be wiped off. Even though
junior may not take crayons to the walls, the likelihood of cute
little handprints is high. Eggshell or velvet finishes are more
scrubable than flat.
Now, don’t get the impression that flat paint is a bad guy. It’s
not. Many designers really love a flat, chalky look. If you have a
shabby chic theme in your home, you want chalky. It’s a milk paint
kind of finish. No sheen, just color.
One of my favorite home stores in Los Angeles is The Silk Trading
Company. Its silks glow, but the paint is as flat as flat gets. Nice
juxtaposition, but not for the baby’s nursery.
Flat paint is also a good choice for a ceiling that has
imperfections. If your ceiling shows tape marks (from poor
dry-walling), slightly bulging nails or subtle cracks, definitely go
for a flat finish. Semi-gloss or gloss paint will just magnify the
imperfections.
You’ve picked your paint color and you’ve decided on a paint
finish. Are you done? I don’t think so. If you want to take your
paint to another level, consider specialty finishes, such as glazing
and crackle.
Glazing your walls is a good way to give a room an extra layer of
depth. Whether you want an “old” look or just want the richness of
multiple layers of color, glazing the walls is a beautiful way to
finish a special room.
If you are going for instant old, use a glaze that has a raw umber
or brown undertone. Premixed glazing compounds are available at
hardware stores like Ganahl Lumber. You can tint your own glaze or
buy a pre-tinted product. If you’re going for “old,” use a brown
glaze over any paint color you have.
Adding an extra layer of transparent color intensifies the “look”
of your room. You can add any layer of color to your paint.
Adding a green glaze to a blue room gives a Bahama Mama feeling.
Adding a light glaze over a dark color gives a room more depth. The
color combinations are endless. If you’re not happy with your
original color, glaze it.
If you have woodwork that needs a twist, a crackle finish will add
character. Using a thin coat of water-soluble glue over the base coat
of paint and adding a water-soluble paint on top achieves the crackle
effect. The crackle effect happens right before your eyes. You can
watch the fissures form. You can do light over dark, or dark over
light. Both effects are dramatic. A crackle finish requires a coat of
sealer, like a lacquer or varnish.
Think multi-dimensional: color, finish, effect and sealer. Or be
shallow, and go for a cool color that you know will be changed in a
couple of years. That’s the beauty of paint. Here one day, gone the
next. Or not?
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs
Sundays.
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