By Adrienne Barker
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October 22, 2022
Applying a crackle finish to a piece is beautiful and allows many variations in color. The steps can be done quickly, and there is a thrill as you see the finish separate in a unique, sporadic pattern across the surface. It can provide charm and individuality to an otherwise ordinary item. The instructions seem simple enough. Apply a base coat, then apply the glaze, and then apply the final coat which cracks in order to show the contrasting paint underneath. What the instructions don't explain is how quickly and purposefully you have to work. In my experience three pieces of advice must be given. Use a good bristle brush - the glaze creates a finish that is almost chalky in feel, despite its transparency. A sponge brush will not spread the top paint coat properly. The second piece of advice is apply the paint in an even, measured fashion, painting with the grain without retouching the same spot multiple times. The cracking begins VERY quickly. If you repaint the spot it will ruin the affect. Trust the application - the cracking will disguise any paint strokes from being visible. Lastly, no two applications are exactly the same. The type of wood, the dryness, and age all seem to affect the way the paint reacts. One application may show delicate breaks and small divisions, while the next try may create large breaks and jagged cracking. Have an open mind and let the piece develop its own unique outcome. Best advice I can give? Trust in the process and then sit back and enjoy the result!