(no subject)
Nov. 30th, 2005 05:42 pmOver the last several years, a lot of the people I know have moved apartmenthood to homeownership and more than a few of them painted their rooms fairly vibrant colors. Donna and Matt's house, for example, is a feast for the eyes in lovely saturated colors with sparkley white trim. My cousin San's house is similarly bright and colorful. Anyway, I suspect part of the desire homeowners have for rooms in color stems from an extended period of apartment living.
Apartments are nearly always painted in some inoffensive shade of off-white. Our apartments are no exception. We use Canvas White, a shade of off white available in five-gallon buckets at our local hardware emporium. (We go through an awful lot of paint.) You'd think it'd be hard to see where you've been painting given that you're painting Canvas White over some other, similar shade of off white. That might be the case sometimes, but it wasn't the case at work today. Today, I painted #5 at 400, an apartment previously inhabited by a parakeet, an old man, and an inexhastible supply of Pantweed's Slim Pantellas (or similar boutique cigarish smoking thing). Basically, the walls were the color of tar. Just to see, I took a wet cloth and swiped it over a wall in the apartment to see if it'd wipe off the tar enough that I could write words on the wall, actual readable words. Yepper. The canvas white is a lot whiter than tar and suprisingly good at covering it up. I think one coat is going to do it for most of the rooms. I did a roller coat on all of the rooms today including the inside of the closet which we clearly hadn't done the last time we painted the apartment. It was a disturbing shade of mustard yellow... but now it is Canvas White. Canvas White, the borg of paint, assimilated the closet today.
Tomorrow, I'll edge the rooms (along the corners, where the roller doesn't quite do its magic, and along the trim where better control is the name of the game) and then *wash* all the trim (because it's sticky and tarry with a fair amount of dust on it) and hit it with high gloss white (Now available in latex easy-clean-up paint. Yay!) High gloss white for trim looks pretty good against the canvas white and maintains the general inoffensive tone of things.
I will probably also do the kitchen cabinets in high gloss white after I peel the greasy, sticky, artificial-wood-grain contact paper off of them. They were perfectly good metal cabinets until someone decided to cover them with dark artificial wood grain contact paper and I expect that they will be perfectly good metal cabinets again after I get done with them.
Apartments are nearly always painted in some inoffensive shade of off-white. Our apartments are no exception. We use Canvas White, a shade of off white available in five-gallon buckets at our local hardware emporium. (We go through an awful lot of paint.) You'd think it'd be hard to see where you've been painting given that you're painting Canvas White over some other, similar shade of off white. That might be the case sometimes, but it wasn't the case at work today. Today, I painted #5 at 400, an apartment previously inhabited by a parakeet, an old man, and an inexhastible supply of Pantweed's Slim Pantellas (or similar boutique cigarish smoking thing). Basically, the walls were the color of tar. Just to see, I took a wet cloth and swiped it over a wall in the apartment to see if it'd wipe off the tar enough that I could write words on the wall, actual readable words. Yepper. The canvas white is a lot whiter than tar and suprisingly good at covering it up. I think one coat is going to do it for most of the rooms. I did a roller coat on all of the rooms today including the inside of the closet which we clearly hadn't done the last time we painted the apartment. It was a disturbing shade of mustard yellow... but now it is Canvas White. Canvas White, the borg of paint, assimilated the closet today.
Tomorrow, I'll edge the rooms (along the corners, where the roller doesn't quite do its magic, and along the trim where better control is the name of the game) and then *wash* all the trim (because it's sticky and tarry with a fair amount of dust on it) and hit it with high gloss white (Now available in latex easy-clean-up paint. Yay!) High gloss white for trim looks pretty good against the canvas white and maintains the general inoffensive tone of things.
I will probably also do the kitchen cabinets in high gloss white after I peel the greasy, sticky, artificial-wood-grain contact paper off of them. They were perfectly good metal cabinets until someone decided to cover them with dark artificial wood grain contact paper and I expect that they will be perfectly good metal cabinets again after I get done with them.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-30 10:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-11-30 11:03 pm (UTC)House of Many Colors
Date: 2005-12-01 01:27 am (UTC)I painted every room in my house a different color. We had red, yellow, green, blue, terra cotta, and sort of lavender walls. Each room did have a white ceiling. I miss my colors.
Re: House of Many Colors
Date: 2005-12-01 01:35 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-01 05:36 am (UTC)I once was given a monitor by someone who smoked like a fiend. It was a browner shade of pale, so to speak. I started cleaning it off, and before I knew it, I had the most nasty, yet satisfying head rush, and eventual heart-racing buzz.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-01 10:58 am (UTC)I didn't notice anything in particular, but I made something of an effort to not bathe in the stuff. It was kind of ghastly.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-02 02:57 am (UTC)The parakeet, on the other hand, did very little damage. Unfortunately, however, Grandma Davis could not see a feasible way to take said bird with her back to California, so we ended up with "Sweetie," a bad-tempered, screeching bird who would try to pry triangles of flesh out of my hands when I reached into his cage to give him food and water.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-03 06:05 pm (UTC)We have decorated our house based on the game Riven. Lots of verdigris and copper and organic shapes.
I had the opportunity to visit Elizabeth Taylor and John Warner's house in Georgetown when I was in college. Each room was a bright royal color with white trim. Red, blue, green, yellow. At the time I was shocked and wondered about it. It did make the Utrillos and stuff stand out.