AND there were at least 15 MORE HORRIBLY UGLY AFTERS which followed one right after the other.
The color in the photo is a taupe-green BLAH! Boo! Hiss! I re-painted the 2nd and 3rd floors over and over again, using every warm and/or neutral color I had on hand. When they didn't work, I sanded down the walls and custom mixed my own paint hoping to hit on that elusive "magic color combination", but it was all time wasted because everything I did looked awful and had to be undone.
This painting and repainting fiasco went on throughout the month of January.
I was in deep despair.
It must have been the last week of January when I stumbled upon a PINTEREST photo of a popular craft called "Tejas"; which are painted Spanish roof tiles which are made to resemble Mediterranean house facades as well as other imaginative scenes. What interested me most about the "Tejas" was that within a very limited space, the artists were effectually able to convey an atmosphere of hot, ancient stone dwellings. 3-D renderings complete with with all the door and window fittings, balconies, roofs, plants, awnings, shutters etc., which gave the clay tile houses, both a sense of location as well as a long history.
so Why, I wondered, wasn't I able to achieve this kind of effect with My dollhouse?
Since this craft was new to me, I watched a demonstration on youtube which I found fascinating Especially the way one artist base painted her entire tile in BLACK prior to adding detail colors which gave the final finish a visual depth. And so with nothing left to loose, I re-painted my villa BLACK too! The next step was to dry brush the black with thin layers of shading and highlight colors to achieve dimension on the flat surface, which brings me to another issue I was having which was the
Wall Texture
I didn't like the texture of my exterior walls. There was either too much of it or not enough and I couldn't seem to get the balance right. So prior to painting the house black, as per the Tejas tutorial, I opted to add MORE texture by glueing on a few paper bricks, then feathering the edges with wall patch. When that was cured I applied a heap of glue and pressed bird gravel onto the wall over the plaster to give it a rough, aged texture as well as some extra character.
below is the base coat of black paint with the bricks glued on and painted.
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