Faux and fabulous: Tobey Renee Sanders has a finish for any room.When Tobey Renee Sanders hired a painter to do more than just paint plain white walls, she wasn't prepared for the cost. So she styled her four rooms herself. Decorating her new Atlanta New Atlanta Communications, LLC is a software company specializing in products to ease creation of Web applications. Based in Alpharetta, Georgia and founded in 1998, the company markets 3 products: ServletExec, JTurbo, and BlueDragon. home, she brushed an X-pattern over silver paint on her walls, creating a brushed steel effect. The design led to so many compliments and requests for her services, she opened up her own business. In 2002, Sanders, 32, launched Faux Decor. By then she had learned the basics: sponging ragging, and striping Interleaving or multiplexing data to increase speed. See disk striping. striping - data striping . But to reach a more exclusive clientele, she'd have to offer more. "I knew I needed to work with Italian plasters and create more graphic walls." Sanders has been attending The Finishing School fin·ish·ing school n. A private girls' school that stresses training in cultural subjects and social activities. finishing school Noun in Atlanta (www.thefinishingschool.com), completing six intensive courses on product variety, mixing color pigments with glazes, and learning advanced glazing Glazing The application of finely ground glass, or glass-forming materials, or a mixture of both, to a ceramic body and heating (firing) to a temperature where the material or materials melt, forming a coating of glass on the surface of the ware. techniques. She has designed walls for luxury homes and fine restaurants in Miami; Detroit; Washington, D.C.; and Atlanta. Sanders emphasizes that faux finishing education is ongoing. "You have to follow the industry," she says, "and take new courses as they come up." Here she describes ways to achieve a fabulous faux finish. Technique 101. To create faux finishes, hundreds of techniques are employed. Sponging, which requires a sponge and rag or porous porous /por·ous/ (por´us) penetrated by pores and open spaces. po·rous adj. 1. Full of or having pores. 2. Admitting the passage of gas or liquid through pores. tool, and lined creations called striping are two of the simplest wall design techniques. It's the application of plaster, however, that elevates the level of design. Different plasters applied with the same techniques can produce a variety of results. "The artistry art·ist·ry n. 1. Artistic ability: a sculptor of great artistry. 2. Artistic quality or craft: the artistry of a poem. is in knowing how to manipulate plaster," says Sanders. Among Sanders' favorite plasters is Lusterstone, which is often described as draping draping, n in massage, technique of securely covering and uncovering parts of the body and moving the client. draping covering the animal with sterile drapes for surgery leaving exposed only that part of the body that has been your wall with silk. "It feeds off light; its metallic tones are ideal for sunrooms and living rooms." Bellisimo Venetian Gem is a marble-based plaster, and Fauxstone is used to replicate the old-world charm of ruins. Sanders applies the plaster with a foam sponge and then randomly taps the wet plaster with crumpled crum·ple v. crum·pled, crum·pling, crum·ples v.tr. 1. To crush together or press into wrinkles; rumple. 2. To cause to collapse. v.intr. 1. paper towels to achieve varying concentrations of texture. On the wall. High-end finishes can require multiple applications, Sanders says. "I may be in a bedroom for five days, working one layer per day. High-end jobs range from $6 to $23 per square foot." It once took Sanders six hours to apply two layers of glazing to a bathroom; she needed six weeks for another job that included a foyer, dining and music rooms, lounge, and master suite. Sanders says most faux finishes add a "luxury accent. They add value to a home as long as you're [using] neutral colors that allow for [changing] interior decor." Know your faux. Look for a finisher who provides sample boards that show the particular technique you are seeking, suggests Jodie Baldanza, a corporate instructor at Faux Effects Inc. International (www.fauxeffeets.com). Essentially, a sample board is "a piece of the wall as it will look [finished]. When a client accepts a sample, the finisher has to come as close as possible to that sample--it's a contract." Baldanza recommends requesting proof of liability insurance, references, photos of previous jobs, and a folio (1) Text management software for the professional reference publishing market from Fast Search & Transfer, Oslo, Norway and Boston, MA (www.fastsearch.com). Known as FAST Folio since its acquisition in 2004 from NextPage, Inc. of sample boards. Some states require faux finishers to have a business license; some are bonded, but it is not a requirement. To brush up to paint, or make clean or bright with a brush; to cleanse or improve; to renew. See also: Brush on faux finishes, read Architectural Surfaces by Judy A. Juracek (Norton, W.W. & Co.; $95), and The Art of Faux by Pierre Finkelstein (Watson-Guptill; $45). |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion