Now I think it is unprecedented! I had an idea that I had never seen before. The situation was that I was trying to figure out what colour to paint the chest of drawers in the kids' room. Suddenly I had the idea to paint in many colours and remove all rules and restrictions. In other words, to do an abstract painting directly on the front panels of the chest of drawers! We are used to seeing art paintings on murals, but why not paint a piece of art directly on the furniture! Now that's just creepy cool!
Acrylic colours can be mixed Lundia to the surface and enjoy the colours and traces that emerge. The tricky thing is that you don't know the end result when you start. The relief of painting abstractly is not having to try to succeed in painting something representational, something we know will look a certain way. There is no need to have a huge amount of desirable drawing skills. When you apply paint with a brush to the surface of a piece of furniture, you can spread it, push it and swirl it around with things like a sponge, a paintbrush, a toilet paper roll holder, a knife, the painting utensils your kids got for Christmas and your fingers. When there are no rules, you can't really fail. You can't really control the outcome, you just have to dare, that's my experience. And with acrylics you can always paint on top. It's mainly a question of when you dare to stop and declare the work finished.
Acrylic paints are plastic-based, and so durable that if you get them on your clothes, even the washing machine won't clean them. However, to ensure the durability of the paint on the furniture, it is varnished with furniture varnish.









This is so inspiring, it makes no sense! Would you dare to give your own furniture the artistic, totally unpredictable, treatment? What do you think, is it a superunique piece of art on a piece of furniture or a now messed up Lundia situation?
