You will need:
piece of salvaged wood
upholstery tacks or short nails (optional)
hammer
acrylic paint (background color)
black acrylic paint (or other color to fill in letters)
large paint brush
small paint brush
laser printer
twine
Sharpie Marker or other dull, rounded tool
This
project started with a pile of cedar fence pieces that we've had
sitting in our backyard for ages. My husband had just loaded a good
portion of them into our chiminea to be burned when I got the idea for these signs and was able to save them from becoming ash.
I loved how grey and weathered they had become from sitting outside. Start by lightly sanding your piece of wood if it's too rough, or just wiping it off to remove any dirt or other loose particles.
Next,
distress the wood to your liking. I hammered a few upholstery tacks
into the corners, added a couple of empty nail holes then banged on it
with the claw of my hammer. In the photo below the top piece is
untouched and the bottom one has been beaten. Poor thing.
Next,
choose your paint. Most home improvement stores sell miss-tinted paints
for very cheap, so during one of my visits to the Home Depot I picked
up this little sample pot of pretty blueish gray paint for .50. Sweet! After
experimenting with different paints while makig these signs, I've found
that the less sheen the paint has, the better. Cheap acrylic craft
paint works best, flat latex paint like the kind I used here is next
best. DON'T bother with spray paint- your letters won't transfer well at
all.
(I
wasn't really sure if I was going to be doing a tutorial for this or
not until I was finished, so I'm afraid I'm missing a few photos for
some of the steps. Don't worry. It will make sense anyway.)
After you've properly dented and nicked your piece of wood to perfection and added your tacks or nails, take your large , dry
paint brush and get a little paint on it. Wipe off any excess on the
lip of your paint can and sweep your paint lightly over the wood. You're
not going for a perfect paint job here. In fact, you want it to be as imperfect as possible without it looking like you were trying to make it imperfect, if that makes any sense. And don't bother painting the sides, just the front.
Once
you're happy with the paint, put the wood aside to dry and head to your
computer. Choose a word and a font that you want on your sign and
enlarge it to a size that will fit on the piece of wood that you have.
Flip it so it's backwards and print.
I
used Adobe Photoshop to print my backwards words using the "Rotate
Canvas" feature under Image, then clicking on "Flip Horizontal". If
you're using another software program like Microsoft Word, it might be a
little trickier. Check the already submitted comments to see if you can
find something that works, or check out this link that
I found that explains how to either flip the text using your printer's
functions, or in Word itself. It seems like kind of an involved process,
but I tried it with my older version of Word and it worked.
Go back to your wood and rinse the paintbrush you just used, but don't worry about getting the brush dry.
Turn
your piece of paper over so that the ink is face down on your wood,
position it so that it's centered (I like to crease the bottom of my
paper along the edge of the wood so it doesn't move around) and begin
brushing the paper with your wet paintbrush.
You don't want to
make your paper sopping wet or the ink will just run and the paper will
disintegrate. Just wet it enough so that it seeps through to the other
side and starts to release the ink from the paper.
Take
your Sharpie lid and begin to burnish your letters going horizontally
and vertically. You want to transfer as much of the ink from the paper
to the wood as you can. Don't peek, though. You don't want to
accidentally shift your paper. Just scribble over each letter being sure
you've burnished over every bit of each one.
Here's what it should look like when you're done. You could leave it like this if you want it to be really faded looking, or...
... you can go back with your small paint brush and fill in the letters a little with some very, very diluted black paint.
Once
you've finished with the word, distress the sign a little more with
some sandpaper, taking off some of the paint along the edges and swiping
it over the word a bit to make it look more aged and authentic.
Finally, nail or staple twine to the back of your wood to act as a hanger for your new, old-looking sign.
I
used some of my favorite foods for the signs I made for my kitchen and I
just adore them. The "cocoa" sign was the very first one I did, and as
you can see I was more deliberate when filling in the letters with paint
than I was with the others. I like the faded look of the other ones
more, so I'll go back and sand it a little so that it matches them
better.
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