HOME IMPROVEMENT Index
Appliances
Basement
Bathrooms
Bedrooms
Cleaning
Contractors
Doors
Driveways & Paths
Duct Tape
Electrical Systems
Family Room
Fences & Gates
Fireplace
Floor Coverings
Furniture
Handles, Knobs & Hinges
Help on the Homefront
Home Energy Efficiency
Home Office
Homeowner in Process
House Exterior
Indoor Pests
Kitchens
Lighting
Outdoor Equipment
Outdoor Structures
Painting
Equipment
Exterior
Interior
Paint & Primer
Staining
Stripping
Tips

Plumbing
Safety
Sports-Related Additions
Staining
Stairs
Storage
Tools
Utility Room
Walls & Ceilings
Windows

BEST OF
HOME IMPROVEMENT
Flooring
Decks
Mold Quiz
Home Safety
Tiling Techniques
Lighting Solutions
Weekend Projects
DIY to the Rescue
Home Renovations
Bathroom Makeover
Kitchen Renovations
Ultimate Media Room
Be Your Own Contractor

SPONSOR LINKS

  • DIY Basics: Five Unusual Paint Tools
  • DIY Basics: Five Unusual Paint Tools
    From "Ask DIY Decorating & Crafts"
    episode DADD-206


    Our DIY Basics segment features paint pro Gary Lord, who shows you the unusual tools needed to create some cool paint treatments.

    advertisement


    You probably have some decorative painting tools in your house and you don't even know it -- and I'm not talking about paintbrushes and rollers. I'm going to show you five common tools that you can use in uncommon ways to add a decorative paint treatment to your home.

    1. Squeegees are great tools for adding texture. Keep the edge flat and then lift and move the squeegee through the paint to create a fan effect. Or notch your squeegee: just use scissors or a razor knife to cut notches into the rubber. There's no need to be uniform -- uneven notches add to the character of the paint effect. Now pull the notched squeegee through wet paint to create a combed look. You can even twist your hand a little to create a different look with this technique.

    2. A wallpaper finishing brush also makes a striated pattern when you drag it through paint. The brush has coarse bristles that produce a great textured look.

    3. This is a tool I'm pretty sure you haven't thought of using with paint: a cake decorator bag and tip. You use it just as you do when decorating a cake, but instead use a very heavy paint such as Venetian plaster. Fill the decorator bag, then squeeze out the paint to create scrolls and flowers. It's a great dimensional texture that's sure to add some pizzazz to a room, molding, even furniture.

    4. A regular school eraser is the perfect tool for creating the veins you need when marbling. Just drag the eraser through wet paint. To make the faux veins look more authentic, turn the eraser in the paint. Remember: you don't want straight lines. You can also twist the eraser while you're working to vary the thickness of the lines. This is probably the easiest way to create a marbled look.

    5. Keep some old keys on a ring to beat out your frustrations and distress some wood at the same time. This is a great way to make new wood look like it's been around for years. Add a tinted glaze to highlight the marks you've made.

    These are just some of the unusual tools I use all the time. You probably have other items around your house that could be used to apply paint in an interesting and unique way. After all, it's just paint! If you don't like it -- paint over it.

  • ALSO IN THIS EPISODE: