The first step was to pain the wall over the fireplace as an accent wall, to cover the dry wall patch from our chimney repair. Since we don't have the original white - which was painted by the previous owners - we decided not to even bother trying to match the other walls, and to go with something completely different.
After debating from every color of the rainbow (the furniture is so boring that nothing was off the table), we decided to stick to something we already owned and used Mythical from the accent wall in our guest bedroom. But first, time to clean and prime (actually, first step was clear out all the junk at least enough to get to the wall and lay down a drop cloth). I didn't bother to photograph the cleaning process, but we turned to our trusty non-TSP cleaner to scrub everything down.
Well apparently we weren't going to use this primer - the can had rusted and left bits of rust in the paint. That one is now sitting outside with the cap off drying, so that we can throw it out.
Fortunately we had an even better choice - a tinted gray primer. Because the walls were already white and in good shape, we didn't bother to cut in and edge the wall with primer.
But we certainly did with the paint. And there were sooooo many edges. That, as usual, was my job. The fireplace was a particularly "fun" challenge.
I mostly freehanded the edge but I did tape off both corners with the other wall. Partly because we didn't have the white for touch-ups and partly because such a straight edge was quick to tape - quicker in fact than doing a freehand edge.
After a few hours of edging, D came in and spent 5 minutes rolling all the rest - so much more dramatic with so much less time. Sigh...
The good news was that this really only required one coat plus some quick touch-ups. The light isn't great in there, so maybe the paint job is really horrible. But it's definitely good enough in dim lighting.We've made tons more progress then this, so stay tuned for our next post!
No comments:
Post a Comment