Not exact matches
We could spend hours reading her product descriptions and like to imagine that life
if you're Sianuska is wearing woolies, hands wrapped round a
cup of hot tea while The Archers plays in the background and happy children
paint chalk pictures on the floor.
4
cups of flour 1
cup salt Food coloring Large Mixing Bowl Water to moisten cookie sheet just a tad
of oil a small rolling pin or wooden dowel a drinking straw ribbon a plate for a guide
paint *
if desired
If glamour is more your
cup of tea, try
painting your hallway walls a soft, dusty blue - gray hue and add decorative molding trim in crisp white.
If you still have a little bit of wood showing through here and there (which will happen more if you paint a light color on a dark piece or vice versa), pour a little chalk paint into a plastic cup and mix in a bit of water to thin it ou
If you still have a little bit
of wood showing through here and there (which will happen more
if you paint a light color on a dark piece or vice versa), pour a little chalk paint into a plastic cup and mix in a bit of water to thin it ou
if you
paint a light color on a dark piece or vice versa), pour a little chalk
paint into a plastic
cup and mix in a bit
of water to thin it out.
I would mix a 1/2
cup of water with about 1 tablespoon
of paint,
if it's too light add more white
paint.
If I am
painting something that I know is going to get abuse like a table top, I add one more Tablespoon to the 1
cup of paint.
If you have a scrap
of wood, a 1/2
cup of paint and pulverized chalk, try it out and see.
Even
if I mixed a tablespoon
of POP w / a quarter
cup of water and mixed thoroughly before adding my
paint, the mixture would turn into a near solidified clump as soon as I added the
paint.
Murray's well - known
paintings of cups, for instance, are commonly described as «teacups,» much to her annoyance: «It's as
if the
cups refer to a bunch
of dainty ladies with nothing better to do than sit around and sip tea,» she says.
If you want to make 2 cups of chalk paint: Using the small bowl, mix the 4 tablespoons of CCP into the @ tablespoons of water and mix well to dissolve the powder, (you can add a tiny bit more water if needed to help dissolve the powder
If you want to make 2
cups of chalk
paint: Using the small bowl, mix the 4 tablespoons
of CCP into the @ tablespoons
of water and mix well to dissolve the powder, (you can add a tiny bit more water
if needed to help dissolve the powder
if needed to help dissolve the powder).
If my thinking is correct, one could mix 1
cup of paint with 1/2
cup of CC.
If the brown stain isn't your
cup of tea, perhaps
painting it out white with a dark grey or even dark blue, to match the curtains, on the frame to mimic the crib.
Even
if I mixed a tablespoon
of POP w / a quarter
cup of water and mixed thoroughly before adding my
paint, the mixture would turn into a near solidified clump as soon as I added the
paint.
If you have a scrap
of wood, a 1/2
cup of paint and pulverized chalk, try it out and see.
If you still have a little bit of wood showing through here and there (which will happen more if you paint a light color on a dark piece or vice versa), pour a little chalk paint into a plastic cup and mix in a bit of water to thin it ou
If you still have a little bit
of wood showing through here and there (which will happen more
if you paint a light color on a dark piece or vice versa), pour a little chalk paint into a plastic cup and mix in a bit of water to thin it ou
if you
paint a light color on a dark piece or vice versa), pour a little chalk
paint into a plastic
cup and mix in a bit
of water to thin it out.
If you found Clockworkinteriors because you're a fan
of painted furniture, go grab a
cup of coffee or tea, put your feet up, and be prepared to be wowed.
Fyi:
If you would like Beige Shadow to be a chalky
paint: Mix 4 TBSP
of Calcium Carbonate (You can order online through Vitacost, Walmart, or Amazon): with 2 TBSP
of water until smooth Add mixture to 1
cup of (flat or satin) latex
paint and you will have a very nice, chalky
paint.
1
cup flour 1/2
cup salt 1/2
cup water A drinking straw A round cookie cutter (a drinking glass will work
if you don't have a cookie cutter on hand) Acrylic
paint (s) and brush Pretty ribbon in your choice
of color
If I mix the 2
cups paint do I use 2 tablespoons each cc, p
of p and water or only 1 tablespoons plaster
of Paris, and 2
of cc and water?
If you want a super durable finish and are only going to distress the edges a bit, then add 2 T's
of each into 2
cups of paint and a little bit
of water.
Pour a half
cup of paint in a mixing can and mix a 1 Tablespoon
of POP with water first and stir it well, then add to the
paint and see
if the color changes.
More CCP is not better for adhesion,
If you lightly sand your piece, and clean it well, 2 Tablespoons CCP in 1
cup of paint will do the job.