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The day we moved in to this house, I knew that one day I would have to deal
with this ugly staircase that leads to my husband's music studio.
As clients traversed these stairs, I was always just a bit embarrassed as
to the "trashy" appearance of this "entrance" in to an otherwise beautiful
and very "classy" recording studio.
With friend husband away on a business trip to Mexico, I decided to take
on the project with great enthusiasm.
I had to use a commercial stripper to get the carpet glue off the steps
but that went relatively easily and I was done within an hour.
I then painted the risers and adjacent side rails with "cream" colored
high gloss paint.
Saving a step, I had my primer tinted to a golden "pumpkin" color, using
it as my base coat, then added streaks of a lighter yellow, blending the two
together with a dry paint brush. This mimics the lights and darks found in
natural wood.
Though there are wood graining tools on the market that make the job of
creating authentic graining very easy, I chose to do my own with an artists
brush by creating lines of deep brown paint (mixed with a little glaze) over
each step.
By creating my own graining, I could more easily control the final look
of each step, making each different from the other. Remember to create lines
that are not straight, but rather bumpy or slightly curved. As an example,
look at any piece of real wood to see what I mean. Rarely is the wood
graining actually "straight".
Knot holes are fun to do and so easy. Simply pick a place on your step
that you wish the knot hole to be, then create a series of arches lines in a
near circular pattern. Smaller and more tightly grouped in the center,
spaced farther apart and wider as you near the outside edge.
Now, blend all of your lines with a dry paint brush.
Three coats of varnish top off the project and make the stairs durable
enough for lots of traffic!
Now I am very proud to have clients walk down in to the recording studio
with it's new oak staircase, lovingly created by my own hands.
Designer's tip:
Oak is not the only type of wood that
you choose to mimic. There are so many types and though with each, the
graining may be a little different and certainly the background colors you
would use would be different, but the technique and application will be
exactly the same.
Choose rich, deeply colored mahogany if
you like or the pale beauty of light maple. The choice is yours! Simply do a
search on the internet to find a photo of your favorite wood and then match
it's background color and mimic it's obvious graining and using this
technique, you too can re-do your staircase, your old book case or any
number of projects that you wish to give that natural wood look to.
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