MARTHASTEWART.COM

Advanced Recipe Search
Home Page » Home & Garden » Herringbone Chair

Herringbone Chair

cancel submit

What do you think of this? Let everyone know! (Click all that apply.)

cancel submit

SHARE THIS

Connect with Facebook to easily update your status and share photos, recipes, and more with your friends.

Connectcancel

More Ways to Share:

Herringbone Chair

A midcentury-modern icon has a brush with tradition in this homage to herringbone, applied by dragging a combing tool across the chair diagonally -- first in one direction, then the other.

Base Coat: Benjamin Moore 2170-50 Teacup Rose (back and seat) and Benjamin Moore 013 Fan Coral (legs and frame)
Glaze Tint: Benjamin Moore 1297 Minstrel Heart

 

 

Tool
A triangular rubber combing tool features the narrow teeth necessary to produce a herringbone pattern.

Paint the Background
Using a 9-inch paint roller with a 1/4-inch nap, paint the surface in desired color using latex paint. Let dry thoroughly.

Make the glaze: Mix 1 part latex paint (pearl finish or satin finish) with 1 part latex or acrylic glazing liquid and 2 parts water. (If using oil paint, mix 1 part oil paint with 1 part oil glazing liquid and 1 part mineral spirits.)

Proceed with any of the patterns, applying the tinted glaze over the dried base coat.

Tip: Smooth irregularities as you work (they can catch the glaze and obscure its effect).

Paint the Herringbone
Using tape to mark 1-inch-wide sections eliminates the need for measuring.

Affix a length of 1-inch-wide painters' tape down the center of item (base coat should already be applied and dried).

Affix 2 more lengths of the tape to one side of the first. Remove middle strip.

Continue taping off, using middle strip as a spacer, until every other length is exposed.

Apply a tinted glaze with a China bristle brush. Drag a triangular comb across surface at a 45-degree angle. Repeat until surface is covered. Let dry completely.

Remove tape strips. Apply fresh tape over combed strips to cover them completely.

Apply a second coat of tinted glaze. Drag comb through it at opposite 45-degree angle.

Lift the tape, and the herringbone pattern will be revealed.

Other Colors to Try
1. Base Coat: Benjamin Moore 2138-30 Mohegan Sage
Glaze Tint: Benjamin Moore 1524 Nature's Scenery

2. Base Coat: Benjamin Moore 2067-70 White Satin
Glaze Tint: Benjamin Moore 438 Spring Valley

More Painting Technique Videos

From Martha Stewart Living, May 2009

Contributors' Comments Add Comment

Also Try...

Next
Prev
  • Fine-Linen Wall
  • Raw-Silk Wall
  • Faux-Bois Dresser
  • Gingham Wall
  • Puppet Theatre
  • Bright Ideas
  • Shell Projects
  • Improve the World
  • Souvenir Slings
  • Fine-Linen Wall
  • Raw-Silk Wall
  • Faux-Bois Dresser
  • Gingham Wall
  • Puppet Theatre
  • Bright Ideas
  • Shell Projects
  • Improve the World
  • Souvenir Slings