Thursday, March 21, 2013

Glazing with a Stain

I have always loved to glaze with a stain, I love how it really antiques the piece, and I love how brown  Dark Walnut stain is, it never seems to look orange.  The only draw back is working time is VERY VERY short, well I have a solution!  My bar stools were my first experiment and I am so pleased with how they turned out, I had to try it on a few accessories too and of course share!






Here is what I did

I mixed 1 part of Mini Wax's Dark Walnut with 2 parts Valspar's Clear Mixing Glaze. 
#1 paint your item your desired color
#2 Distress it.  I wanted white to show through so I first primed it and then painted the pink over the top.
#3 Brush your above mixture all over.  Now adding the mixing glaze does increase your working time however it still does dry faster than a regular glaze so have wet wipes on hand to wipe off quickly.  If you are doing a bigger piece, for example my stools, I picked an area, painted on the stain glaze mixture and then wiped it off before moving on to another area.   



and TADA...





I used the same technique on this shelf and look at the difference, instant antiquing!



TTFN

Brooke

10 comments:

  1. Everything looks beautiful Brooke - but I just love how the glaze worked on the pink mirror!!!
    Hugs,
    Suzan

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  2. Your instant antiquing looks really good! Love all the sweet pastel colors around the shelf. So pretty!

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  3. Love the antique look!! Thanks for sharing an easier way to achieve this look.

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  4. I am in LOVE with that pink frame! I love the texture of it and all the nooks and crannys!

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  5. Thanks so much for this amazing tip! I used it on my dining room chairs and they turned out fantastic!

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  6. I have never made my own glazing mixture so I have a question. Isn't Valspar glazing mix a water based product? How does it mix with an oil based stain? Thank you!

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  7. I love your stool! Can you tell me what color it is? Thanks!

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  8. Love this effect but can't seem to get the mixing glaze in the UK, can I add a water based varnish to the stain instead? Thanks x

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  9. I'm unable to find the mixing glaze in the UK, can I use a water based varnish instead? Also what finish does it leave on the item, satin or matt? Thanks

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  10. I know this is old, but I've just been bitten by the diy furniture bug:) and just found your site.
    I'm doing my first project now, our oak dining table. The legs are white and top and chairs are a shiny natural oak. I've stripped and sanded the top, and actually have Dark Walnut for the top;)
    I played around with my new random orbital sander and sanded the legs a bit. I like how it looks distressed. My plan has been to paint the chairs a blue and green and distress them( do I really have to sand ALL those little spindles!!?). I planned to spray paint them..but I realized today that if I do this the wood showing through on legs and chairs will be the light oak color, and not match the dark walnut top?
    I was thinking I'd maybe do a dark brown primer on these before I painted them? But I like this idea better. So basically everywhere I've distressed, the natural oak will be stained the dark walnut?
    I'm sorry this is so long- I've not seen this done. I'm off to pinterest it now but thought I'd ask!;)

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