What brand of
milk paint do you like to use?
What color of
milk paint did you use?
Stenciling with
milk paint does offer its challenges as it is inherently thinner than acrylic - based paints, and thinner means the chance of bleeding under the stencil.
This piece currently has a shiny polyurethane finish, which milk paint doesn't stick to very well in some cases.
I normally like to live on the wild side and just see what
milk paint does.
The primer dries really fast and
the milk paint does, too.
Not exact matches
Real
Milk Paint doesn't just sell milk paint either, but everything needed for DIY projects, from wood oils to brus
Milk Paint doesn't just sell
milk paint either, but everything needed for DIY projects, from wood oils to brus
milk paint either, but everything needed for DIY projects, from wood oils to brushes.
My daughter loves
doing kids» craft projects, playing with her American Girl WellieWisher dolls,
painting her nails with this fun
Milk & Cookies nail polish, and of course giving fun gifts to her friends.
A few rooms, not including my bedroom where baby will sleep,
do need refreshed and I am eager to try one of the natural or
milk paints.
I
did my main bath also with the
milk paint and I have no chipping going on and we live on a farm!
Your hubby is a whiz and you
did a fantastic job with the
milk paint.
I
do love your
milk paint — but I'll bet the boys would go for the wood....
When I realized how well the
milk painted stool I recently
did with my son matched the red accents on the towel hooks, I couldn't resist adding it to the space.
i love everything you
do in your home I would love to
paint my old solid cherry bedroom furniture using all
milk paint to make it more girly girl.
I have yet to try
milk paint, mostly because I need projects to have a fast turn around rate and since you have to sand pieces first -LCB- which I hate
doing -RCB- I always go to my trusted chalk
paint.
I mixed up the
Milk Paint with bonding agent as I always
do and started applying the
paint....
If you
do decide to
paint and wax, you might try Miss Mustard Seed's
Milk paint which just came on the market.
Chalk
Paint and
Milk Paint I use on the outside of my furniture and the Fusion I have just started to use on the inside (I
do not
paint the outside of furniture with Fusion, I just don't like working with it, but it is great on the inside — Fusion
Paint claims to be a «Chalk - Like
Paint» but it is nothing like chalk
paint — this is my honest opinion).
Do you think that milk paint would do well on a laminate dresser (i.e. IKEA
Do you think that
milk paint would
do well on a laminate dresser (i.e. IKEA
do well on a laminate dresser (i.e. IKEA)?
Did you use bonding agent in the
milk paint?
If you want a distressed look, you will be sanding some of your
paint off which is most easily
done with
milk, chalk, or mineral
paint.
Started a project using white
milk paint over a very dark piece (bleed thru is not the problem), it's just a much different chemical composition (thinner coverage, even when mixing - in less water) and doesn't cover well, requiring a minimum of 4 coats (great for some projects, but not this one).
If you are just interested in
milk paint in general, I know some sellers stock samples of Miss Mustard Seed
milk paint, but I don't know a specific one off the top of my head.
For the base, I
did not want any chipping so I added Bonding Agent to my «Limestone»
milk paint.
Did you have to sand all the finish off before
painting or can you just
paint over it with the
milk paint?
You can leave out the bonding agent like I
did for the chairs but keep in mind not all furniture will chip with
milk paint.
love love everything you,
do and I could not live without your
milk paint, it is the best and the colors are beautiful.
I'm sure it's designed for use with her
milk paint, but it's expensive and I don't care for it.
I know the feeling because I
did a
milk paint black dresser as well for my older son's room.
The Swedish
do it better with
milk paint and a wax.
This is the look I was going for, so I didn't even add another coat of the
milk paint, I just kept going to finish the armoire.Here she is... all
painted and ready for wax!
This was my first time using
milk paint and I didn't know what to expect when I first started it.
Reminding me that I don't know everything and no matter how much experience I have with
milk paint it can still totally backfire on me.
with all the
painting projects i've
done i've never actually used ASCP or
milk paint!
Here's what they have
done: Hanna, the woman from Hungary, melts
milk chocolate and
paints Harry's body with tantalizing tickles; She warms up some Manuka honey and drip it onto Harry's chest, then lick it off with her sensitive tongue; She dusts icing sugar on her nipples; She gives Harry a blow job under his desk at the office; Harry gives his Hungarian woman an orgasm by touching her sweet spot under the table of a restaurant; Hanna gives Harry a blow job while Harry is on the phone with a co-worker;
We will look for the true answers to all your wood
painting and surface treatment questions, how to make multiples — «
Do I spray or brush, should I use the CNC carver, do I use milk paint or acrylic; can I just order those legs online?&raqu
Do I spray or brush, should I use the CNC carver,
do I use milk paint or acrylic; can I just order those legs online?&raqu
do I use
milk paint or acrylic; can I just order those legs online?»
Looking at the benjamin moore simply white for a bathroom with pale gray cabinets
done in general finishes
milk paint.
I've been very interested in
milk paint and thinking that is what I will
do to my bedroom furniture, but need to have directions......
I don't collect real
milk glass but I found out last year that you can spray stuff with white appliance
paint and make it LOOK like
milk glass (to an untrained eye) so I am always on the lookout for stuff to spray
paint to add to my faux collection..
If you
do decide to
paint and wax, you might try Miss Mustard Seed's
Milk paint which just came on the market.
First close up pic (under the pic of
milk paint pakage) I see a little heart on the «thingy»
do you?
I've not tried the
milk paint because I don't particularly care for the haphazard chipping look, but this piece has certainly inspired me.
I don't know what I
did wrong, but it came out crackled & some of the
milk paint was still chunky.
I didn't want this trunk to look shiny new, so
milk paint is the perfect product.
Milk paint has this wonderful ability to keep you humble... Just when you think you have it mastered, it will jump out and
do precisely the opposite of what you expect!
did you use
milk paint on the chairs?
and was thinking about
doing the same thing...
painting with
milk paint....
The powder all over, the mixing, the bits that just won't mix, the bumpy
paint, the completely unpredictable way it sticks to some areas and not others (even after using
milk paint primer), the way its flaked up in random pieces larger than can be considered attractive «patina,» even after waxing, its short shelf life... The experience (disclaimer — I
did not use the Miss Mustard Seed brand) really drove home how lucky I was that acrylics were invented!
do you like
milk or chalk
paint better?
I know you
did hold some
milk paint classes there and they were highly successful.