A crackle-glaze finish can be applied to picture frames, furniture, walls, flowerpots -- almost any surface you can think of. Here are a few easy ways to achieve this old-fashioned peeling-paint effect. Crackle-Painted Finish Materials:
Project or surface to crackle-finish Satin latex paint in two contrasting colors Crackle-finish medium Paintbrush Polyurethane sealer - Apply a base coat of paint to your project surface, and let dry. The base coat will show through the crackled top coat, so choose paint colors that contrast nicely. We used a black base coat and a white top coat.
- Brush a coat of clear crackle-finish medium onto the piece. The crackle glaze usually takes 30 minutes to an hour to dry; follow the manufacturer's directions.
- Brush the latex top coat onto the piece, loading the brush with enough paint that each section can be painted with one motion (figure A). The crackling begins immediately on the first layer of paint it comes in contact with. Avoid over-brushing, which erases the cracks.
- When the entire crackle finish is dry, seal the piece with a coat of acrylic polyurethane.
White glue may also be used as a crackle-glaze medium (figure B). Brush the glue on a base-coated piece, and when the glue is just dry enough to form a thin skin, brush on the top-coat color. As the glue dries completely a subtle crackle effect appears. To achieve a spidery, mottled crackle finish, spray-paint the latex top coat (figure C).
|