The Telegram (St. John's)

It’s been over 20 years

- Decorating expert and television personalit­y Debbie Travis appears in The Telegram’s My Home each week. Email your questions to house2home@debbietrav­is.com House to Home with Debbie Travis 7590144

For more than 20 years, I have been happily ensconced in the busy life of making television shows and writing about decorating and design. One of my favourite roles has been as a syndicated columnist, writing Debbie Travis’ House to Home columns weekly, along with my longtime writing partner Barb Dingle. I have you, my readers to thank for continuing to send in questions and welcome comments.

It is an important milestone, one that encouraged me to look back at all the trends, decorating tips and projects that we have covered. My journey began in the late 1990s when decorating shows were in their infancy. In fact, my first television series, The Painted House, was a pioneer in this type of programmin­g. I discovered that viewers were passionate about their homes and wanted to take a major part in fixing them up. My decorating tool was paint. DIY became a familiar acronym for do-ityourself, and there was an explosion of products and projects that homeowners championed. My newspaper columns began shortly after. Today, as has always been the case, central to the columns are all the questions sent in by you, the readers. Your household challenges have guided, and continue to shape, our editorial path.

For the next few weeks, I will be looking at those challenges that were most frequently posed in the past, and what has changed. Significan­t technologi­cal and historical events offer new and easier solutions to your questions. Let’s begin with how I began - with a bit of paint, some common household tools and lots of imaginatio­n. The advent of water-based paints, glazes and varnishes, which are continuall­y being perfected, took paint effects that were the purvey of fine artists who guarded their secret recipes, and made them not only possible but easy for anyone to master.

Creating texture on walls with paint started a revolution; looking back on it may give you shivers. Take a kitchen sponge and dip it into paint. Layer different colours on the wall and you have contrastin­g shades and depth. This simple effect leaves the wall surface bumpy. But it has a more sophistica­ted look when combined in a technique such as stone blocking.

Shown here, shades of grey, sand, brown and white are sponged over each other and gently blended to resemble the look of real stone. Before sponging, the stones are marked off with painter’s tape. Note the hall table top has been marbled using a simple recipe: paint, glaze and a plastic bag to produce the veins and shading.

Wallpaper took a back seat as painted finishes flourished. Although sponging is no longer popular, the idea of texturing a wall with layers of paint, using a coloured glaze to allow for manipulati­ng the surface, is still in vogue. Fresco, colourwash­ing, and antiquing are all timeless paint effects that appear in modern as well as traditiona­l homes.

Where are we today with paint? The most asked question over the years has been “what colour should I paint my walls?” This is a personal choice and not always easy for me to answer without knowing who you are and what you like. Paint is the quickest way to transform a room, and if you aren’t happy it’s easy to change. We have moved from creamy whites as the common denominato­r to shades of gray that are in vogue today. They are safe, comfortabl­e, well suited to contempora­ry rooms, and work well with just about any other colour.

Wallpapers are back on trend, nudging painted wall finishes back somewhat. Interestin­g that many of the new wallpapers are designed to look and feel like painted finishes, adding similar texture and character without quite so much work.

 ??  ?? At left, the timeless look of frescoed walls can be produced by anyone using today’s eco-friendly paints and glazes.
At left, the timeless look of frescoed walls can be produced by anyone using today’s eco-friendly paints and glazes.
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 ??  ?? This faux stone entrance hall, circa 1998, was a paint technique made accessible with the advent of waterbased paints and glazes.
This faux stone entrance hall, circa 1998, was a paint technique made accessible with the advent of waterbased paints and glazes.

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