

From there it’s a dance of artist oils and scumble glaze and clear varnish painting, drying, painting and wiping away, until the balance of colour and the softness of the final finish is just so. Working meticulously on paper shades, he applies nothing short of eight layers, typically beginning with his signature gold leaf ground. His faux finish lampshades and obelisk bases have garnered a cult following-spot one on James Mackie’s bedside table in the November issue of House & Garden.

This is a process that artist Malcolm Scoular is also all too familiar with. Even the smallest item takes weeks to complete. The scale doesn’t really matter,” she says. “The finish is quite laborious and time consuming, especially if you want a beautiful finish that takes up so much depth and colour variation. Having recently purchased a house, Gordon now has space where she’s working on small objects, like painted boxes inlaid with mother-of-pearl. Gordon painted woodwork ( right) with layers of cream, taupe and brown tortoiseshell to compliment dark olive faux Japanning she’d lacquered on the walls. On the flip side, for a project by Colefax & Fowler’s Lucy Hammond Giles, the goal was a far subtler approach. The result was a maximalist pattern-on-pattern effect. For Campbell Rey, she recently completed a bathroom in Belgravia where walls and lampshades were painted in high contrast yellow and umber tortoiseshell.

To execute her vision, Mendoza turned to The Finisher’s Co., a collective of artists and master artisans founded by Dominic Lewis.Ītma Decorative Arts’ founder, Magdalena Gordon, studied paint effects at the Van Der Kelen Institute in Brussels and creates faux finishes using traditional techniques-but the results can look wildly different depending on her brief. And the existing fireplace has these beautiful old ceramic tiles that the tortoiseshell finish picks up on.” It also perfectly complements the Blue Gum wall paint colour. “There’s so much going on in this room, it needed a neutral. That made it the perfect choice for updating the original Victorian mantel in her Queens Park living room ( centre). “They go hand-in-hand, like a little leopard print,” she says. It’s this feeling of an old cafe that I wanted,” he says.įor interior designer Stephanie Barba Mendoza, tortoiseshell feels like a neutral, much in the same way one might consider an animal print neutral. “It gives the interior an amazing sense of character, almost like old tobacco stains. The highly lacquered finish is surrounded by matte burgundy paint creating a cocooning quality. Inspired by the classic bistros of Paris, Hall commissioned specialist painter Pauline Leravaud to create a tromp l’oeil tortoiseshell on the ceiling. Should you find yourself in Paris, step foot inside the brasserie he designed, Café Les Deux Gares ( left), and look up. “I love faux painted finishes because you can create something that’s really special and completely unique,” says artist and designer Luke Edward Hall.

BURGUNDY PAINT FX FREE
Free from the constraints of conscience and scale, skillfully applied tortoiseshell paint effects can be employed in the most unexpected ways. But today, as more compassionate minds have prevailed, designers champion the faux variety over the real thing. The name André-Charles Boulle may come to mind-he the late 17 th century cabinetmaker to Louis XIV. Think of tortoiseshell (or turtleshell) in the decorative arts and chance are you’re picturing inlaid boxes, small frames, or intricately applied marquetry on furniture at museums like The Wallace Collection and the Victoria & Albert Museum.
