Painting with a Feather Duster

A Decorative Touch that Looks Great and is Easier Than Wallpapering

By Ron Smith, published Mar 06, 2007
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For many years the traditional way of redecorating a room in the home was to either re-paint or re-wallpaper. Nowadays, however, there are a lot of different methods that are being used to provide those accent colors and really spice up a room renovation. Sponge painting over a base coat is popular, as it provides a faux textured finish, and gives the surface of the wall a three-dimensional look.

Another interesting look is obtained by applying accent colors over the primary coat with an ordinary household feather duster. Wispy little patterns strategically positioned break up the bleak formality of the all white or all beige wall, and provide colors that can be picked up in matching carpet, furniture, or draperies. The technique is probably easier than sponge painting, and can be finished in less time than it took to roll on the base color.

What you need. The process only requires a few extra articles, and a little extra time. Before you begin, you will need to select a base color, and three or four accent colors. For each accent color, you will need a separate feather duster, and a separate paint bucket. Each of the paint buckets have to be large enough to put the feather duster in easily. This means that the normal one-gallon paint cans will not work. If you are doing new construction, you can use the five-gallon buckets that most professional ceiling paint comes in. If you don't have any of the five-gallon paint buckets, you can see if the local fried chicken chain restaurants will sell you some of their large paper buckets.

Paint color ideas. Everyone has their own preferences when it comes to colors in a room, and different paint colors can be selected, depending upon the size of the room, and how much lighting there is from windows. (When we feather painted the bed room, we selected a soft beige color for the base, and applied feather duster swirls in deep crimson, navy blue, forest green, and white.) Any colors that will match the other items you plan to have in the room will work.

Painting with a Feather Duster

Work one wall at a time when applying accent colors with a feather duster, to make sure that you are achieving the desired effect.

Credit: Ron Smith

Copyright: Ron Smith

Takeaways
  • Feather duster painting is generally easier to master than sponge painting.
  • Accent colors applied to the wall can be selected to match furniture or draperies.
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