Bungalow

Finishing the Interior Finishing the Interior Finishing the Interior
Protect your hands

 

Real Good Toys

Painting the Beachside Bungalow

Supplies:
 

Paint: [See the Paint-Color worksheet]
Brushes and rollers:
2" foam brushes (at least 2) for the housebody
1" foam brush (at least) for each paint color
3" foam roller for smooth and interior surfaces
3/16" flat artist's brush for small details

Sandpaper: very fine sandpaper (at least 3 sheets)
Faux-Wood Flooring: (if chosen) [video]
Other:
A stiff hand brush
Paper towels and "clean-up" supplies
A knife or scraper for cleaning up drips on the edges

Preparation:
 

Protect the work surface: cardboard, newspapers, but wax your table first to help protect from paint accidents

Protect your hands: latex gloves or petroleum jelly and talcum powder

These parts take a large area to spread out for painting and drying; make sure you have enough space!
Latex painted parts can not be stacked even after the paint seems dry or they will stick together.
If you must stack painted parts, separate them with waxed paper.

A word about primer: Primer is designed to help paint stick to an impervious surface or to join layers of dissimilar paints. The job of the first coat of paint in a dollhouse is to soak right into the wood and fill the grain - you could do that with primer, but its job of being an interface between different materials doesn’t apply here. In this application, primer just adds steps and expense. I don’t use it here and don’t suggest it.
However, I do paint the inside of the Walls and Roofs, the Dividers, and the bottoms of the upper Floors one coat and then sand down to the wood before assembly, and primer or any light paint would be a good choice for that.

Painting

 

First coat [video] everything that will be painted in the finished house, inside and out.  Don’t get paint on edges that will be glued, on the ends of posts or rails, or in the walls' grooves.

Finish the Floors [here]

Sand [video] everything that has been painted. Sand thoroughly until the surface is smooth and feels “soft”, and the paint is transparent with some of the wood showing through. Sand the clapboard with folded sandpaper, one clapboard course at a time.

Assemble Windows, Brackets, Postbases, Railings, Foundation

Second coat [video] all exterior parts except the Postbases.

Anywhere a part can be marked to leave an area with wood showing for the glue to grab should be marked very lightly, then painted to just cover the mark. Doing this leaves some wood for the glue to grab (glue doesn't stick to paint), but hides the edge of painting inside a joint... much cleaner than masking for a paint-edge.

If two adjacent parts are the same color, assemble them first, then second-coat them together.

When you must glue to a painted surface (like Porch Posts), scrape a hidden spot to expose some wood for the glue to grab.


Painted interior? Scrape the edges of grooves and ceilings.
   
Paint a Door  
Paint the Stairs Faux-Wood Treads