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Debbie Travis: Get lacquered look using layers of wax

Dear Debbie: My partner and I听are refurbishing an old table and wood-back chair. We like the style of Japanese furniture lacquer.
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From Annie Sloan Paints Everything, a fabric lampshade is patterned with paint.

Dear Debbie: My partner and I听are refurbishing an old table and wood-back chair. We like the style of Japanese furniture lacquer. Have you any tips on how to create the look?

Akiko

Traditional Japanese lacquered furniture pieces show a mirror-like, silky smooth finish that glows with colour and depth. The effect is created by applying many thin layers of lacquer and sanding carefully after each application is dry. It takes time and patience.

You can get similar results using a few layers of wax rather than lacquer. Here is a technique from artist and paint designer Annie Sloan鈥檚 new book Annie Sloan Paints Everything, published by Cico Books. Sloan transforms a reproduction table she found at an antique store. The table鈥檚 upturned ends, crossbar and gently splayed legs听are reminiscent of Shinto shrines.

Sloan uses her signature brand Chalk Paint and Clear and Black Waxes to build up layers of听texture and colour. Her Chalk Paint works beautifully on furniture without priming or sanding.

For this Japanese-style table, the base coat is Chalk Paint in Barcelona Orange. Two coats are applied, moving the brush back and forth to create texture, but not excessively.

A fairly thick coat of paint is brushed on, then feathered out so faint brush lines are visible.

Sloan鈥檚 Clear and Black Chalk Paint Wax is used over the paint to graduate the colour and intensity. First, clear wax is brushed over everywhere but the top side edges and legs. Next, use a small wax brush to apply the black wax first to the edges and legs that have no wax, then to the rest of听the surface over the Clear Wax.

Wipe off the excess black with a soft cloth, leaving some behind in the brush strokes. Use more Clear Wax to rub over the black; it acts like an eraser. Once the black edges are almost dry, polish them with a soft cloth to听remove a little of the black, giving a worn appearance.

Sloan鈥檚 website, anniesloan.com, also shows step-by-step instructions and videos. The most important lesson is to practise a听little on an old board until you see for yourself what different brush strokes and rubbed-on waxes can do. Mix Chalk Paint colours to create your own shades. I know you will love your renewed furniture pieces.

Dear Debbie: My daughter and I听are making some curtains for her to take away to school in September. We like the idea of tie-dye. Can you use paint? Do you have other fabric projects?

Anon.

Shibori is the ancient art of dying fabric to make patterns. This is a great idea for decorating a college room at little cost. You can make pillows, curtains, makeshift room dividers and cupboard doors with a few yards of fabric and dye.

Why not make up a lampshade? In Annie Sloan Paints Everything, Sloan uses her Chalk Paint to dye the fabric. Chalk Paint in Napoleonic Blue is mixed with water to thin it down.

The fabric is folded lengthwise in concertina folds and then back and forth into triangle shapes. The edges of the triangles are dipped into the dye, leaving white space in the centre. Open up, hang to dry, and iron to听heat set.

Debbie Travis鈥檚 House to Home column is produced by Debbie Travis and Barbara Dingle. Please email your questions to [email protected]. You can follow Debbie on Twitter at twitter.com/debbie_travis, and听visit Debbie鈥檚 website, debbietravis.com.