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IOD SILICONE PAINT BLADE

$ 29.70

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Description Here she is – the tool you’ve all been waiting for! Introducing the IOD Silicone Paint Blade – a must-have for any trowel painting technique. WHAT’S THE IOD SILICONE PAINT BLADE? The IOD Silicone Paint Blade is a brand new DIY decor tool for applying paint, blending, and creating texture. You can use it for troweling techniques with paint (that’s our favorite!) as well as with texture mediums for raised stenciling. When you use the IOD Silicone Paint Blade, you use less paint than with a paintbrush and can easily save any unused paint by scraping it off the blade and back into the container. It’s also perfect for people like Sally who are terrible about washing out her paintbrushes. Crusty, day-old dried chalk-style paint comes off oh, so easy! The small blade has a 65mm (2.5”) blade. The large blade has a 140mm (5.5”) blade. They are approximately 70mm (2.75”) high and approximately 20mm (0.75”) deep at the thickest point of the handle. Watch a video where the sisters show you how to use it. HOW TO USE THE IOD SILICONE PAINT BLADE – THE BASICS When coating a surface with the paint blade, you’ll want to keep the following in mind: “Thin for the win” first coat Blade angle and pressure control the thickness of your paint Adding texture Adding color The paint blade is fabulous for any flat or curved surface. And it will save you time and paint when working on porous materials, such as upcycled cabinet doors, plywood, and other unfinshed woods. “THIN FOR THE WIN” BASE COAT Think about the first coat you apply with the blade as almost like a Gesso or a primer.  A thin coat engages differently with your surface than a thick coat.  Your thick coat is more likely to shrink crack and not bond, whereas that thin coat is laying your base.  It’s a foundation to build on. ANGLE THE TROWEL The angle and the pressure on your trowel will determine the thickness that you achieve and whether you are adding or removing paint. An upright angle, where the trowel is almost a 90-degree angle, will remove paint from the surface.  If you lay the trowel down to a low angle, 45 degrees or so, and have less pressure, you’ll lay more paint down.  Play with the angle and pressure on the blade to get a feel for it. Once the thin base coat is on and dry. Check it for any big chunks, lumps, or ridges. It happens and is no big deal. Just give them a quick rub with fine-grit sandpaper to knock them down, then wipe the dust off with a damp shop cloth. You want this first coat to be buttery smooth. ADDING TEXTURE When working with paint, you can use the IOD Silicone Paint Blade to add texture in two different steps. First, you can add texture as part of your base layer. This is when you can play with different stroke movements to get different looks. You can use long, even strokes in the same direction, cross-hatch where you make a little ‘x’ for an Old World plaster feel, swirls to create a feeling of movement or perpendicular strokes for a more industrial vibe. Watch this video where we experiment with different base layer textures while we were developing the final IOD Silicone Paint Blade.
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