I remember seeing a book at Home Depot as a teenager and I saw the how to do faux Tortoise shell finish in there. I didn't buy it and to this day I wish I had... so thanks to google and etc. I searched the web for a suitable substitute.... what I found was:
This guy: optimism and white paint
This guy: xrestore
And, this chick: gorgeous shiny things
Of course, I didn't do it quite the way any of them did it... :-) Not to mention that I had ordered a 1990's book by Annie Sloan all about how to faux tortoise shell.... but that just came today. A day late and dollar short of course.
This guy: optimism and white paint
This guy: xrestore
And, this chick: gorgeous shiny things
Of course, I didn't do it quite the way any of them did it... :-) Not to mention that I had ordered a 1990's book by Annie Sloan all about how to faux tortoise shell.... but that just came today. A day late and dollar short of course.
Most faux tortoise shell how to's tell you that you need a yellow base. So, after I sanded it down I painted it yellow, not a perfect paint job. Just enough to cover it. |
EEK... So, I did this with Burnt Umber and Coffee Bean plaid paints. I was kinda wanting it to look like a chevron spine type thing. That's why I did the diagonal lines instead of random all over... |
Then I put glaze coats over it. I just watered down the Coffee Bean and Burnt Umber and kept applying them I still applied it in the diagonal chevron pattern... looks a little better... |
You can see the copper glaze better here. I also :-) decided to add just a hint of a gold metallic paint too. I wanted a glitzy tortoise shell, I guess... A couple dozen more glaze coats and:... |
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