Thursday, 31 December 2015

Saving money and the planet, using old world recipes to make furniture paint from scratch


As the earth is warming and governments are scrambling to retain greenhouse gas emissions, I walk around smiling, safe in the knowledge that I am doing my bit - and so can you!

So here is how you can relax and enjoy this year!






Break The Pattern

Waste is one of the biggest culprits killing the earth. And it's not just the value of the product that lands in a rubbish skip, it is the accumulated cost of getting it there from manufacturing to end user. It's the labour, the electricity, the transport, the storage - all added together over the product's lifetime. 

So a product may only cost a few dollars but these accumulated costs can run into hundreds, even thousands. How do you stop this wastage? Keep things in circulation, keep them from being replaced, increase their value.


Recycle vs. Up-cycle

By adding value to a piece that you're recycling, you are up-cycling. Most furniture painters are recyclers. You see scores of pictures on Pinterest and in magazines. Entire TV programs are devoted to recycling. "Here is a quick and easy way to save some money", usually slapping on a coat of paint and adding a cushion. 

There is nothing wrong with this, we all do it. But I would like to think my work permanently saves furniture from the rubbish skip and not just temporarily. And for that, you need to put in a little more effort. It may not be the quick and easy way, but is it really that much more effort? 






Waste Not, Want Not.

Words I so often heard my grandfather utter when I was a child. He lived through the Great Depression and his frugal ways made a huge impression on me. He was a recycler and up-cycler long before these words existed to me and not because he had to, but because he found it challenging. I believe he instilled in me an urge to see the potential in a discarded object, to create something out of nothing and to value simple things.

I used to paint furniture with modern paint. I used to have a storeroom filled with tins from previous jobs. Most of it ended up being thrown away. It was either the wrong colour or the wrong odour. This bothered me to no end. Every time I tossed another tin of hardened paint in the bin, I could hear my grandfather: "Waste not, want not." 

Since I've started making my own paint, things have changed - a lot. These days I have a cupboard with dry materials and a fridge with wet supplies. Leftovers are mixed together to make dark base coats. Or I use them on odd small pieces that need several coats of different colours. I have less than 3% wastage. I'm sure my grandfather would have approved. 

I now also have access to any colour imaginable, not just the ones on the colour chart. I can create colours in the middle of the night on a public holiday and any other time when the store is not open. The transport cost of making paint is almost nothing. So is the storage. And if I only need a small bit in a specific colour, I only make a small bit. I buy my raw materials locally - I don't have them flown in if I can get them down the road. 





So, am I doing enough for the environment? Yes, I am. I don't have sleepless nights about saving the planet. I do what I can and that’s the end of it. Then I relax and enjoy myself. I suggest you do the same. 







May 2016 be the absolute best-est, best-est year of your life!



Happy New Year
and 
Happy Painting!

Tania
xxx

#patina #paint #handmadepaint #homemadepaint #upcycle #upcyclewithpaint #recycle #environment #2016 #happynewyear #wornpaint #oldpaint #agedpaint #paintwork #paintedfurniture  #distressedpaint #paintcourse #onlinecourse #paintfinishes #farragoz #painting #classes #paintingclasses #paintinglessons #paintingtutorials #courses #paintingcourses #traditionalcrafts #crafts #howtopaint #howtomake #decor #homedecor

Thursday, 24 December 2015

Merry Christmas


♫ 'Tis the season to be jolly, fa la-la la la, la-la la la.






I love, Love, LOVE Christmas! It's my absolute favourite time of 
the year.





I really like my job and I feel very grateful to have the opportunity to do it. But I cannot do it without your support. For that, I would like to sincerely thank you. We appreciate it very much and will never take it for granted.






May your Christmas be filled with love, happiness and peace!






From our family to yours ~ Have a Very Merry Christmas!





Tania
&
The FARRAGOZ Team

xxx
#christmas #christmasdecorations #santa #santaclaus #paintfinish #onlinecourse #christmastree #furniture #homemade #milkpaint #antiqueing #patina #distressedpaint #painteffect #HappyHolidays #shabbychic #wornpaint #handpainted #handmade #frenchstyle #paint #chippedpaint #oldpaint #learnonline #artistic #miniatures #glassbaubles #painting #classes #paintingclasses #paintinglessons #paintingtutorials #courses #paintingcourses #traditionalcrafts #crafts #howtopaint #howtomake #decor #homedecor



Wednesday, 16 December 2015

FARRAGOZ has a new course!

It's called the FARRAGOZ Patina FINISHES Course and it consists of 24 26 finishes with step-by-step instructions.







Reproducing Antique Finishes


How often do you see a beautiful painted antique in a magazine and you so badly want to be able to recreate that finish, but you have no idea where to start? You can't even work out which colours to use. And what's the process?






Suitable For Beginners


These finishes look very difficult, right? And they can be.  For the past year, we have been painting and planning to come up with a process that will teach even a beginner how to do this online in a very user-friendly way. Finally, we compiled this new online course in which we have broken up every technique into small steps that explain in detail, by way of videos and text, how to do each step. 






How It Works


We believe learning should be fun and easy. That's why we follow a very logical and teachable process that starts with analysing the finish and ends with a finished sample board. With every step you finish, you just click "complete" and you will always know where you left off when next you return to continue. There is no way to get lost.

We take you through the process 24 26 times. Every time you make a different sample board and with every sample board, you gain more confidence. Soon you will be able to take a magazine and reproduce any finish by yourself.






Mixing Paint


The FARRAGOZ Patina FINISHES Course focuses on how to achieve various finishes on wood, using homemade primer, paints and sealers. 

We often get this question: "Isn't mixing your own paint very difficult?". Well, there is nothing as easy as opening a can of modern paint that is ready to use. The same goes for dried pasta, for instance. But can you really compare handmade fresh pasta with dried mass produced pasta? Of course not. Same with handmade paint. That is the way it was done hundreds of years ago and if you want an authentic look, that is the only way. 

So how difficult is it? It is not difficult at all. There is an easy process to follow. The difficulty only exists in your mind. Anything we are not familiar with always seems challenging. Anyone can learn to make pasta. It's flour and water, cut into strips. Nothing more. Same with paint. Before the very recent invention of modern paint in cans, mixing your own paint was as common as making pancakes - everyone could do it. If they could, so can you.






Who should do the course?


The Patina FINISHES Course is directed at furniture painters who wish to achieve a rich patina on wood that looks authentically old. This course goes beyond the application of paint. There are sections on how to set up a small studio space in your home, how to set goals, how to avoid chaos, how to do presentations for clients and much more. The Patina FINISHES Course is for both the hobby furniture up-cycler as well as the more professional furniture paint artists wanting to set themselves apart.






Already a FARRAGOZ student?



The Patina FINISHES Course can be taken in addition to the Patina PROJECTS Course, together or separately and in any order.







We've had such raving revues from students taking the Patina PROJECTS Course. Thank you very much for that. We hope this new course will exceed your expectations.






Happy Painting!

Tania
xxx


P.S. Two bonus finishes have been added to the initial 24 finishes since the launch of this course.



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Tuesday, 11 August 2015

Study of Patina in Dusky Rose


Insider Tips on how to recreate Dusky Rose patina on wood.


What do you see when you look at old paintwork? Chipping? Scuffing? Cracking? I see all of that and a whole lot more. Over the years I have trained myself to not merely look at old paint, but to really see it. To see its patina. To see its colours. To see its history.



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As children, we were taught to name colours. Red, white, pink, etc. In time the palette grew as we added names like cerise, plum, salmon, blush. When we look at something, the colour immediately registers in our brains. We see a door. A pink door. An old pink door. But do we really see the colour of the door?  Look closer. How many colours do you really see? It's not just one solid block of pure pink. It appears blotchy or wavy. It appears that colours have separated and merged to form various shades of pink.




red
    Pinterest                                                                         


Once you realise that this happens when paint ages, you can't help noticing these beautiful variations. The patina.


The same happens in nature. It is filled with those wavy colours that seamlessly run and blend into each other to form natural patina of its own. It is for this reason that I constantly turn to nature for inspiration when I want to create patina with paint.




After I was recently asked by a student how she would go about recreating the weathered finish of this door, I started studying the colours in order to mix the paint for my sample. 


Wow
Pinterest                                                                                                                                  



It was during this process that I took a break and went for a long beach walk. With all these shades of pink freshly ingrained in my mind, I was not surprised when I realised that subconsciously my eyes were picking out pinks from what the tide washed up. Never before had I seen so many pinks on the beach, although I'm sure they're always there. 

What did however surprise me, was to find a piece of kelp (see image below) with its roots encrusted in a salmon pink matter that appeared to be a kind of coral. I had only ever seen this in white, but never in this colour. It was so perfect, it had to go home with me.



   FARRAGOZ.COM                                                                                          


After photographing my finds from the beach, I followed the following steps to create a sample board that would match the finish of that on the door.




STEP 1


Pin all inspirational images showing a rich patina in Dusky Rose on a Pinterest board specifically designated for this colour palette.







Steps 2 to 4 were taken care of seeing as I already had the image of the door.


***

STEP 2


Look at these in close-up. Note the amount of distressing of the paint on the flat surfaces and on the details of each piece. 



STEP 3


Choose one finish that you think will work well on the piece you want to paint.



STEP 4


Enlarge the image as much as possible without losing definition.

***



STEP 5


Study the paintwork in detail to identify the different colours that have been exposed through natural ageing over the years.

In this case, I identified 5 colours, excluding the colour of the wood.



STEP 6


Look very closely again and identify in which sequence they were applied. By this I mean, decide which colour was painted first, second, third and so on. 



First: Pale Straw


















Second: Mulberry





Sanctuary, Kefalonia , Greece
        dreamaker2.tumblr.com                                                                           


Window in Colonia, Uruguay.
flickr.com                                                                                                                           







Beautiful age
Pinterest                                                                                                                             





Third: Pale Pink


pink barn siding...doesn't get much better
northofthetyne.co.uk                                                                                                                     






Giato Salò: Ribaltina svedese
giato.blogspot.it                                                              









Fourth: Salmon









The late Dodie Rosekran's Apartment In The Palazzo Brandolini ~ Grand Canal, Venice.
frenchstyleauthority.com                                                                                                                           



Love the light shades of pink
politicsofmonogramming.tumblr.com                                                                                                                 



old world design   love, love    

fleaingfrance.tumblr.com                                                                                                                                             



For every house is built by someone, but the builder of all things is God…. And we are his house if indeed we hold fast our confidence and our boasting in our hope. ~ Hebrews 3:4,6
Pinterest                                                                                                                           









Fifth: Pink







pink building in poznan poland
entouriste.com                                                                                                                   



door
flickr.com                                                                                                                           







 Pink bird. For cute pink styles, shop www.Crocs.com/...
   verbalvisual.com                                                          

                                                                                                                                                                                  

                                                                         
old pink lock by daniel.virella #pink ☮k☮ #rosa
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STEP 7


Prepare your wood for painting. It will most certainly need sanding to some degree, even if you're using your homemade primer from Module 4.



STEP 8


Mix the paints in the various shades of pink you have chosen, using the recipes in Module 6.



STEP 9


Apply the different colour layers in the correct sequence, using a resist where needed as in Module 2 and Module 6.



STEP 10


Distress, always keeping your eye on the image you chose to work from. Stand back from time to time to view your piece from a distance and compare it to the image. Don't be afraid to distress "too much". You can always cover it up by adding another coat of the final colour where necessary followed by final distressing. 






STEP 11


Seal your paintwork as we've shown you in the course, to create that extra rich patina.




I added a final step to this sample board and applied some "dust" to emulate that on the door in the image.





Happy Painting!

Tania
xxx

UPDATE: In December 2015 we launched the FARRAGOZ Patina FINISHES Course. This old-world furniture paint finish, F307, is now one of the 26 FINISHES that students learn how to recreate using the detailed step-by-step videos and instructions in that course.


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