Stripes are a classic design element that can add interest to any room. Adding stripes to your walls with paint is a technique that gives you the freedom to create original, personalized vertical or horizontal patterns that reflect your taste and lets you customize the colors to match your décor.
Plan out your design — do you want vertical or horizontal stripes? Do you want to paint them on an accent wall or throughout the whole room, or something else outside the box? Choose a color scheme. It’s common to choose two shades of the same color, but you don’t have to limit yourself. For a bolder effect, try contrasting colors that complement one another. For a more subtle striping effect, use the same color for the basecoat and the stripes, but in different finishes. You can be more contemporary by using stripes in varying widths.
Apply a base coat of True Value EasyCare Ultra Premium Interior Paint with a roller or paintbrush, in the lighter of the two colors you chose. Allow the area to dry completely before painting the stripes.
To create vertical stripes, use a ruler, yardstick, or measuring tape, and a pencil to measure and mark even intervals along the top edge of the wall. Do the same along the bottom of the wall, marking the exact same measurements as the top. Continue along the length of the entire wall. Use painter’s tape to mask out vertical lines starting from the top marks to the bottom marks. These will form the outside edges of each of your vertical stripes.
Horizontal stripes are made in a similar fashion. Measuring with a yardstick and level, mark where you want the topmost stripe to be from the ceiling. Trace a line with your pencil along the top of the yardstick. Continue creating this line in the same way across the length of the wall. Using the same technique, create the rest of your horizontal stripe pattern as wide as you want your stripes to be.
Apply painter’s tape to the lines you made in pencil on the “outside” of the lines. Continue the process until you’ve masked all the stripes. This will keep you from painting over the lines and ruining your base coat. Using a small or medium-sized paintbrush, carefully apply the second color or finish, making sure to keep within the lines you made with tape. Let the paint dry completely before removing the painter’s tape. Pull the tape away from the wall gently in a downward, angled motion.
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