Showing posts with label Saltwash. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Saltwash. Show all posts

Friday, August 5, 2016

I'm Hooked


All it took was 1 little can

and I was hooked.


My first project was an old table


followed by an old stool.


This morning I decided to attack the top of my sewing machine base and since several people have asked about Saltwash, I thought I would show you how easy it is to use.


Saltwash is a powder you can add to any paint and I prefer to use Annie Sloan Chalk Paint.


I wasn't sure how much I would need for the table top and I probably could have used a little more paint.


The paint mixed with Saltwash goes on quite lumpy.


My first two projects I mixed the Saltwash with Pure White and used the darker color as the top coat - this time I used white as the top coat.


When shot from above the table, after sanding, the green pops through the white,


but from a side view, the table top looks white.


I like how the table top turned out, but whatever my next project is, I will use white as the undercoat.


 I'm having fun using Saltwash - it's simple, quick and gives a fresh new look in the house and garden.
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Join me at

Poofing the Pillows for Thoughts of Home Thursday

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Paint On My Hands

 

A rusty old watering can


and this cute little can of Saltwash occupied my day last Friday.


Actually, it wasn't the watering can, but the bottom that rusted completely off and I saved for some inexplicable reason.


But, then I saw this cute sign and all of a sudden saving the rusty circle seemed to make sense.


My can of Greek Blue paint was out so I slapped a coat on that rusty piece


and rearranged the porch shelf to show it off.


The blue paint was out because I was transforming an ugly duckling of a table into a swan using Saltwash and Annie Sloan Chalk Paint.

@ilovesaltwash

I learned about Saltwash on Instagram and I was intrigued with the the bumpy, weathered look the Saltwash creates so I ordered some online from Amazon.


The first thing I painted was the top of a stool using an undercoat of Saltwash and ASCP in Pure White followed by a top coat of Antibes. 


I love the crackled look after sanding.


This table had seen better days,


and I am so pleased with the way it turned out.


Annie Sloan Chalk Paint dries quickly so the whole transformation, from mixing the Saltwash into white paint to the final sanding, only took about 3 hours.


When you look at the before and after photos of the kitchen, you can see that I painted one more thing - I'm reducing the amount of red in the house so the farmhouse table got a coat of ASCP Pure White.


Today there was no paint on my hands and it wasn't as much fun - I washed every pillow and slipcover in the house.