MARTHASTEWART.COM

Advanced Recipe Search

Newsletter

In this week's

  • Beautiful Crafts
  • Good Things
  • Our Favorite Recipes
get the newsletter
Home Page » Crafts » Wood-Grain Wrapping Paper

Wood-Grain Wrapping Paper

2 Ratings (See All)

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:

Wood-Grain Wrapping Paper

Beautifully grained woods are nature's masterpieces, but, as style editor Tom Tamborello demonstrates, it is possible to re-create their sinuous patterns and harmonious colors on paper, using a wood-graining tool and latex paint. The decorated paper is perfect for wrapping gifts, and because you control the "grain" and color of every piece you create, each sheet of wrapping paper is unique. The process of wood graining, known as faux bois, is fairly simple: A tool resembling a comb is pulled through a thin layer of paint, leaving a grained pattern in its wake; the grainer is then slightly rocked or wiggled to produce different effects.

Tools and Materials
Glossy, nonporous paper
Low-tack tape
Latex paint
Glazing medium, for latex paint
Mixing bowl or bucket, for latex paint
Paintbrush
Wood-graining tools

Wood-Grain Wrapping Paper How-To
1. Affix a sheet of paper to a flat work surface with low-tack tape. It's important to use a glossy, non-porous paper that will not soak up paint and become wrinkled.

2. Mix paint with glazing medium and a bit of water to thin it, and brush a thin coat along one edge of the paper in a swath slightly wider than the wood grainer. Work with one swath of paint at a time; if you paint the entire sheet at once, the paint will dry too quickly. Drag the graining tool slowly through the paint, rocking it at varying intervals; a wood-grain pattern will emerge. If you don't like the resulting pattern, quickly brush over it and try again.

3. Continue until the entire sheet is filled. Let dry thoroughly before using.

Special Thanks
Special thanks to Tom Tamborello of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia for demonstrating this craft.

Contributors' Comments Add Comment

Also Try...

Next
Prev
  • Asian Wrapping Paper
  • Faux Bois Candles
  • Cookie Tin Basket
  • Faux-Bois Dresser
  • Leather Tabletop
  • Valentine Stamp
  • Painted Floors
  • Mesh Votive Holders
  • House Numbers
  • Asian Wrapping Paper
  • Faux Bois Candles
  • Cookie Tin Basket
  • Faux-Bois Dresser
  • Leather Tabletop
  • Valentine Stamp
  • Painted Floors
  • Mesh Votive Holders
  • House Numbers