Monday, May 14, 2012

... AN AWOL PAINT SPRAYER AND SOME DIBBY DAB...

I have  had a paint sprayer. I'm reluctant to admit defeat and pronounce had, but my paint sprayer is MIA, AWOL, taken a hike....no where to be found. I discovered this two weekends ago when I was loaded with all the paint supplies I needed to spray paint 6 large pieces of wicker furniture.  We had been bringing the pieces to the cottage during our recent weekend cottage trips as there is abundantly more room and a garage in which to paint successfully.


I had used the paint sprayer once before to paint Gramma's Vanity


.....so I knew I could make quick work of repainting our wicker furniture with the said paint sprayer. 

The wicker in question has been on our front porch for 4 summers. We had bought these pieces several years before, in a natural finish for the screened porch at our previous home, but the natural finish was not going to cut it on the new porch so I had them professionally sprayed in Wenge. BTW....it is pronounced  WEN GAY...not WENGGGGG.....who knew?

Because the furniture is on the porch year round, and suffers the onslaught of bitter, windy, Ottawa winters and gaziilion degree, humid summers, over time, it started to chip.....jeeeeese I hate that....so I would touch up until it became evident that touching up was not going to cut it any longer. I only need this furniture to get through 3 more summers tops at which point, when we move to our condo...oh ya, we bought a condo with a big balcony (stay tuned) ....we'll purchase proper outdoor furniture. 



Now when I bought the Wenge paint 4 summers ago, I bought it from supplier A, but supplier B is right around the corner from home, I was in a hurry, so I had B whip up a quart of the same colour formula....or as it turns out....close enough after he added black three times.....well ... kinda close. I also wanted to prime all the pieces with a similar coloured primer....no problemo? .....and I also asked the pro at B which size brush I should use.....again...no problemo?  However, the entire time I'm buying the brushes and paint,  I'm wracking my mental pausal brain trying to figure out where my paint sprayer is.

Back at the cottage, I'm psyched and prepped for painting wicker...albeit, without the paint sprayer. I have token spray washed all the pieces to sort of clean them. I'm secretly hoping that any lingering dirt, which will be painted over, will actually bind the wicker and perhaps slow down the rate at which it is starting to unravel . I open up the quart of base coat......annndddd.... it has not been primed....it is white...I mean white and my top coat which is dark dark brown, is now going to have to be topcoatS to cover the white primer. "poop de do". Long story short....I  didn't sweat the small stuff .....

unravelling wicker 

uh oh.....

YIKES.....

Primer done. Lunch time...Top coat. 

backs are all remaining original...due to lack of paint sprayer
Now that  'matched' paint is  c l o s e  in colour, but not identical... It has more red in it despite the 3 generous squirts of black added by the pro at B. But I actually like it and I'm only compromising a little on this. It's slightly richer, has more depth than the original 'wen gay'. 

Have you ever painted wicker dark brown, that has been primed in WHITE, with a 2" brush.  It takes time. There is no such thing as nice long easy strokes.....that primed wicker is THIRSTY and soaking up that chocolate paint like a dried up sponge in August.  Did I mention we had friends coming for dinner that evening? Geez Louise....it's not like I'm around the corner from paint supplier A B C or D and can buy more paint oh and by the way... a BIGGER brush.   I'm in the boonies. Super beautiful boonies, but still the boonies.  

nice, long, easy, strokes = not so nice

This is when I had to get creative and invent my own painting technique. Let me introduce you to the 'dibby dab' method of painting.
1. load your brush 1-2" up the bristles with paint
2. don't wipe off excess...just let drip into can
3. quickly bring loaded brush to WHITE primed wicker
4. now dibby dab into all those bazillion nooks and crannies that are hallmarks of wicker...you know what  I mean...
5. make sure you get the bristles right down in there...come on squish that paint brush...as much out of frustration because your paint sprayer decided to live somewhere else as the need to get the paint down deep. 
6. change the direction of the brush slightly so you get the other nooks and crannies in the other direction
7. realize that the quart that you thought would cover 6 pieces of 'wenge' primed wicker will now become a quart plus a gallon. 
8. It's May....I wish I could say that NO blackflies where harmed during this project....but if the dibby dabbing happened to catch one or two ...or a hundred, what can I say....their problem, not mine!

long strokes on the left ... 'dibby dabbed' on the right 

I knew I could only bring half of the furniture home at a time. The rest I would paint the following weekend (this past weekend) after I blasted the pro at B for not priming my paint like we had discussed, and recommending I use a 2" brush. 

I find it extremely interesting that the white primer had no issues getting way down deep into all those wicker hills and valleys....but the brown paint was stubborn, wanted to stay on top and leave little specks of white primer showing.

patience is a virtue...patience is a virtue.....but a paint sprayer would be better!


BEFORE ... thinking I'm going to be using my paint sprayer 


AFTER...two full coats of paint and many touchups...sans paint sprayer


stay tuned for the styled porch pics ...coming this way soon


oh...and if you see a rogue paint sprayer with spattered blue paint...it's mine.

11 Comments:

At May 14, 2012 at 8:22 PM , Blogger Pixiesmith said...

You didn't mention the sunburn...

 
At May 14, 2012 at 8:23 PM , Blogger Pixiesmith said...

P.S. I LOVE the new colour.

 
At May 14, 2012 at 9:28 PM , Blogger Maureen @ Modecor said...

thanks Pixiesmith. The sunburn is noe the BIG PEEL....and looks ridiculous....farmer Mo with gloves. think I'll paint the front door the same colour.

 
At May 14, 2012 at 11:16 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Great post, Maureen. Having painted three old wicker chairs several years ago with a combination of a semi-functional old sprayer, a brush, and yes, even a re-purposed hairspray pump in an attempt to get even watered down colour into the nooks and crannies, I could relate to every dib and dab.... I can't wait to see the final pictures!
-- Carol

 
At May 15, 2012 at 9:32 AM , Blogger Lynne Knowlton said...

I think I would have duct tapped some monster sized foam on the bottoms and went for a float in the lake instead LOL. Gorgeous work. Aren't you glad I am not there helping? xx

 
At May 15, 2012 at 11:30 AM , Blogger Maureen @ Modecor said...

not much more i can do now Carol....going to proceed with porch styling, which will be way more cathartic

 
At May 15, 2012 at 11:32 AM , Blogger Maureen @ Modecor said...

i would have kept you busy making me a rainchain or a twig accessory ...and far far away from the wicker painting Lynne.

 
At May 15, 2012 at 12:01 PM , Blogger OR DESIGN glassworks. Distinctive Custom Architectural glasswork said...

Wonderful depiction of your adventures in Wen-Gay, Maureen! Thanks for the chuckles!

The wicker looks wonderful - think you should print your post and display it on your porch as a centrepiece! ;) Pam

 
At May 15, 2012 at 10:04 PM , Blogger Donna @ Paisley and Perspective said...

Oh no! I am checking in my paint sprayer first thing tomorrow to make sure it didn't run away with yours! Little devils!
Great job regardless Maureen, and I'm sure you enjoyed the well deserved glass (or two) of wine! Hope that paint sprayer shows up soon :)

 
At May 16, 2012 at 5:50 PM , Blogger maureenatmodecouses said...

Thank you Pam...a bit of paint on my hands, arms and feet is proof of the adventure. Just wait till you see the none paint spattered porch reveal!

 
At May 16, 2012 at 5:53 PM , Blogger maureenatmodecouses said...

Can you believe it Donna.... I've used it once. And yes, there were several reward glasses of wine

 

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Maureen at Modecor Muses: ... AN AWOL PAINT SPRAYER AND SOME DIBBY DAB...

... AN AWOL PAINT SPRAYER AND SOME DIBBY DAB...

I have  had a paint sprayer. I'm reluctant to admit defeat and pronounce had, but my paint sprayer is MIA, AWOL, taken a hike....no where to be found. I discovered this two weekends ago when I was loaded with all the paint supplies I needed to spray paint 6 large pieces of wicker furniture.  We had been bringing the pieces to the cottage during our recent weekend cottage trips as there is abundantly more room and a garage in which to paint successfully.

I had used the paint sprayer once before to paint Gramma's Vanity


.....so I knew I could make quick work of repainting our wicker furniture with the said paint sprayer. 

The wicker in question has been on our front porch for 4 summers. We had bought these pieces several years before, in a natural finish for the screened porch at our previous home, but the natural finish was not going to cut it on the new porch so I had them professionally sprayed in Wenge. BTW....it is pronounced  WEN GAY...not WENGGGGG.....who knew?

Because the furniture is on the porch year round, and suffers the onslaught of bitter, windy, Ottawa winters and gaziilion degree, humid summers, over time, it started to chip.....jeeeeese I hate that....so I would touch up until it became evident that touching up was not going to cut it any longer. I only need this furniture to get through 3 more summers tops at which point, when we move to our condo...oh ya, we bought a condo with a big balcony (stay tuned) ....we'll purchase proper outdoor furniture. 



Now when I bought the Wenge paint 4 summers ago, I bought it from supplier A, but supplier B is right around the corner from home, I was in a hurry, so I had B whip up a quart of the same colour formula....or as it turns out....close enough after he added black three times.....well ... kinda close. I also wanted to prime all the pieces with a similar coloured primer....no problemo? .....and I also asked the pro at B which size brush I should use.....again...no problemo?  However, the entire time I'm buying the brushes and paint,  I'm wracking my mental pausal brain trying to figure out where my paint sprayer is.

Back at the cottage, I'm psyched and prepped for painting wicker...albeit, without the paint sprayer. I have token spray washed all the pieces to sort of clean them. I'm secretly hoping that any lingering dirt, which will be painted over, will actually bind the wicker and perhaps slow down the rate at which it is starting to unravel . I open up the quart of base coat......annndddd.... it has not been primed....it is white...I mean white and my top coat which is dark dark brown, is now going to have to be topcoatS to cover the white primer. "poop de do". Long story short....I  didn't sweat the small stuff .....

unravelling wicker 

uh oh.....

YIKES.....

Primer done. Lunch time...Top coat. 

backs are all remaining original...due to lack of paint sprayer
Now that  'matched' paint is  c l o s e  in colour, but not identical... It has more red in it despite the 3 generous squirts of black added by the pro at B. But I actually like it and I'm only compromising a little on this. It's slightly richer, has more depth than the original 'wen gay'. 

Have you ever painted wicker dark brown, that has been primed in WHITE, with a 2" brush.  It takes time. There is no such thing as nice long easy strokes.....that primed wicker is THIRSTY and soaking up that chocolate paint like a dried up sponge in August.  Did I mention we had friends coming for dinner that evening? Geez Louise....it's not like I'm around the corner from paint supplier A B C or D and can buy more paint oh and by the way... a BIGGER brush.   I'm in the boonies. Super beautiful boonies, but still the boonies.  

nice, long, easy, strokes = not so nice

This is when I had to get creative and invent my own painting technique. Let me introduce you to the 'dibby dab' method of painting.
1. load your brush 1-2" up the bristles with paint
2. don't wipe off excess...just let drip into can
3. quickly bring loaded brush to WHITE primed wicker
4. now dibby dab into all those bazillion nooks and crannies that are hallmarks of wicker...you know what  I mean...
5. make sure you get the bristles right down in there...come on squish that paint brush...as much out of frustration because your paint sprayer decided to live somewhere else as the need to get the paint down deep. 
6. change the direction of the brush slightly so you get the other nooks and crannies in the other direction
7. realize that the quart that you thought would cover 6 pieces of 'wenge' primed wicker will now become a quart plus a gallon. 
8. It's May....I wish I could say that NO blackflies where harmed during this project....but if the dibby dabbing happened to catch one or two ...or a hundred, what can I say....their problem, not mine!

long strokes on the left ... 'dibby dabbed' on the right 

I knew I could only bring half of the furniture home at a time. The rest I would paint the following weekend (this past weekend) after I blasted the pro at B for not priming my paint like we had discussed, and recommending I use a 2" brush. 

I find it extremely interesting that the white primer had no issues getting way down deep into all those wicker hills and valleys....but the brown paint was stubborn, wanted to stay on top and leave little specks of white primer showing.

patience is a virtue...patience is a virtue.....but a paint sprayer would be better!


BEFORE ... thinking I'm going to be using my paint sprayer 


AFTER...two full coats of paint and many touchups...sans paint sprayer


stay tuned for the styled porch pics ...coming this way soon


oh...and if you see a rogue paint sprayer with spattered blue paint...it's mine.