Help! My new home is knotty pine on floors, walls, ceilings!
jcmeredith
last year
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cubby14
last yearhousegal200
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Family Room in new house - knotty pine paneling help!
Comments (76)Well, I've called all around and any of the wood "reclamation" companies aren't real interested in pine boards. Those that may be would require me to take it all down, sort by size and stack and bind all the boards up for shipping, and they're in different states I figure they're not going to pay much if anything for it once they figure their transportation costs. I could give it to habitat for humanity I guess, but again, someone would have to carefully dismantle it all, stack and take it there and we don't have a truck. I was hoping against hope there would some company out there that would come and take it down and haul it away - I'd give it to them for free just for their labor. Now if it was cherry, or hickory or something interesting like barn siding I think I'd have some takers! :-)...See Morebrainstorm decor for log/knotty pine walls/ceilings
Comments (8)I think I'd get wood fatigue also and might try a white-wash technique in some rooms. Perhaps a bedroom or even just on a ceiling. The link Chris11895 posted shows Sarah's bunkie at her cottage. This is Sarah's answer to the treatment they did on the pine walls: Sarah Richardson says, "In order to get the effect we achieved with the whitewashing we simply rolled semi-transparent oil-based stain tinted in a variety of shades (see the source guides) and then brushed the joints to ensure an even application. Be sure to test an area first and perfect your technique before rolling away! We did not wipe off the stain as recommended because I wanted greater coverage, but the effect was achieved with a single coat. Note: You cannot apply a whitewash stain over panelling which has a urethane coating - it won't penetrate (the only solution here is to paint it in a solid stain)." IMO if the walls have a urethane coating you could do another urethane coat with the addition of some paint. Test it on a scrap of wood or in an inconspicuous place like inside a closet to see if the proportions of paint and urethane gives you the finish you want. You should still see the wood grain but the overall effect will be lighter if white paint is used, and a faint tint of color if a colored paint is used. Always use the same type of paint and stir carefully and frequently as it settles. If you don't want to paint the walls you might use window treatments outside the edge of the windows so they cover part of the walls. Using lots of art or hangings on the walls will give more interest and cover more wood. Use either lots of neutrals or lots of color in WT and furniture, whichever your preference. I would probably use lots of colored/patterned area rugs such as Oriental or southwestern styles. Or seagrass if you go for a neutral look. Alternatively you could just embrace the wood look and use wood furniture in different tones and lots of dark fabrics in WT and upholstery. Cozy cabin style....See MoreWhite washing knotty pine walls and high beam ceiling
Comments (25)Hmmm...I have an idea. Never tried before, so please do a sample board. Disclaimer, may fail, too. Ok.... So, since whitewashed knotty pine has a tendency to come out pink, maybe using the opposite of the color wheel to counteract the pink would help. Adding the opposite color into the 1st coat of wash, then a 2nd thicker coat of white wash on top. I use this opposite color application a lot in watercolors to tone colors in my paintings which is similar process in whitewashing. Please note again, it is a concept. Please do a sample board 1st. My process before doing walls for clients.. I get 2-3 sample boards to experiment with to test the products & application before going into doing a whole wall. I highly suggest practicing on samples until application works. Then test it on actual wall, let it all dry. see it in daylight & night lights. Once it passes all the tests to client's liking, then go for it full force in confidence. It's a lot of extra steps & precautions, however a lot less unforseen problems later. Hope that helps. Whatever ends up working, would appreciate seeing. Please post after photos. Good luck!...See Morelighting for Knotty Pine ceiling with oak beams HELP!
Comments (3)Hi Beth! Above the knotty pine is plywood, insulation, TPO roofing. Our roof is completely flat. I actually like the idea of faux beams over the existing one. That wouldn't be a bad idea. The beams have natural cracks in them which are an eye sore. The faux beams would those come with lighting pre installed or is this something that is custom made? Asking because through every room in our house we have the knotty pine with beams. I'd want to have the faux beam matching as close as possible....See MoreJudyG Designs
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