Faux Brick Wall - Faux much fun!
First, I painted the walls a grey. This was the undercoat which would eventually show up as the grout. While only one wall would get the brick treatment, painting the rest of the room the same color lended itself to both the industrial look and tied the brick wall into the rest of the room.
Next my dear friend helped me figure out how to put up some paint tape up. (I used the "Scotch Delicate Surface" since I had painted the grey only two days before) It was trial and error. We thought using a laser level would work just fine in getting the horizontal rows even. The wall was so crooked, that the laser didn't go down the whole length of the wall. We ended up finding one point on the wall that was pretty even and we used the laser level for one horizontal line and measured everything else off of that.
Next we tore the paint tape lengthwise so one side was a little bumpy. We tore a LOT of tape. We put the bumpy side up and measured off the straight side for all measurements.
We used a piece of cardboard about the size of a brick to measure where each of the across pieces would go. We started every other row with 1/2 of that cardboard to simulate 1/2 a brick. That creates the stagger effect of real bricks. That part worked well.
Then I took a sponge and three colors I liked for the brick. I put each color of paint in a paper plate. I primarily used the red and used the other two colors for accent colors. This part was a lot of fun. (see my comments below for the actual colors used in this project)
After I was done painting, I pulled off the tape. You don't want to wait until everything is completely hard-rock dry. Go ahead and take it off right after you finish sponge painting. This will ensure that the tape doesn't tear off some of the paint that you want to keep on the bricks.
After I caught my breath, I did some work on the individual bricks including adding shadow to each brick. Add a line of dark brown paint to the right and bottom of each brick and smudge it into the grout. This is where the wall came to life.
More faux looks were adding some white paint with a sock and then rubbing off most of it. Adding paint splatter and paint drips with white paint. I mixed some grey paint with brown paint to make "dirt" and rubbed it lightly on spots on the grout to add age. You can get real creative here. I'm thinking about making some rust stains and algae on some of the bricks.
My boys are thrilled so I'm happy.
Comments
Thank you,
Larry