This little tip can be useful for so many projects.
Click on the image to enlarge and read how to make an Egyptian stick. This is a great tool for making stripes. It's from the book:
Designer Faux Finishing
Ideas and Inspiration for Sophisticated Surfaces
By
Victor DeMasi
Faux finishing, or decorative painting, is the process of applying multiple layers of interior house paint and glaze to craft a textured or photorealistic pattern, such as wood grain, marbling, a cloudscape, and onward to more complex murals and trompe l’oeil. Most of the other faux-painting titles in the market focus on either room shots *or* finished paint swatches but do not successfully evoke both inspirational and hard-working images. Designer Faux Finishing fills that empty niche.
Designer Faux Finishing will inspire homeowners to transform their homes into leather-worn libraries, ancient grottos, or French streetscapes with just a little help from paint. Chapters provide color, design, and lighting inspiration, enabling readers to make design decisions when working on their own or with interior designers.
Victor DeMasi (West Redding, CT) owns Monarch Painting and Monarch School of Decorative Painting in West Redding, Connecticut. A successful painting contractor for more than 20 years, he has found even greater success with decorative painting techniques. His work has appeared in the New York Times, Yankee Magazine, American Painting Contractor, and The Faux Finisher.
The Egyptian stick is such a simple concept, that I'll bet a lot of people would never have thought of on their own. I know I wouldn't have. Thanks for the information. Also, I love the video bar you've added to the blog!
Posted by: Barbara Hagerty | January 25, 2010 at 08:22 PM