Painting Woodwork
There is no rule which says you must paint woodwork white,
or strip it, or color it to merge with the walls. In a room
whose walls, window frames and doors are in the same neutral
color, you could paint the skirting board a clear contrasting
color. This will define the line between the floor and walls.
Trim colors that contrast with walls and ceilings might suit
your style in one room, while a more subtle color change might
be right somewhere else in the house.
You can liven up plain, flat walls by adding moldings so as
to create panels around the room. For best results, make sure
you keep your working area within the proper temperature range
recommended for the paint. All interior woodwork that has been
stripped, from baseboard to dining room tables, needs to be
primed with either a standard acrylic wood primer. After that
you can paint on it with oil-based flat eggshell, gloss, or
acrylic paints.
Most interior woodwork looks best in an eggshell finish, as
high-gloss paint can have a rather bleak, deadening effect. If
your plan is to paint walls, ceiling, and trim, then it's best
to get the trim painted first, along with the room's windows
and doors. Paint woodwork in small sections. Keeping a wet edge
to avoid lap marks.
A wide range of broken- color effects work well on woodwork,
but ideally you should use oil-based paints as latex has little
durability on wood. Stains add color to wood while allowing its
natural grain pattern to show through. Varnishes are clear
finishes that form a tough coating over stain. They are
available in a range of finish sheens from satin to high gloss.
At the end of a project, combine all of the leftover paint of
the same color into as few cans as possible.
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