Choosing a Treatment
Most projects involve repainting. It is the historic appearance of the
interior and the visual impression that will be created by new paint treatments
that must be considered before choosing a particular course of action. The
type and colors of paint obviously depend on the type of building and the
use and interpretation of its interior spaces. A consistent
approach is best.
Preservation. When the treatment goal is preservation, a building's existing
historic features and finishes are maintained and repaired, saving as much
of the historic paint as possible. Sometimes, cleaning and washing of painted
surfaces is all that is needed. Or a coating may be applied to protect important
examples of history or art. If repainting is
required, the new paint is matched to existing paint colors using the
safer, modern formulations. Recreating earlier surface colors and treatments
is not an objective.
Interior spaces that are being rehabilitated for a new use can benefit from being repainted in historic period colors rather than a neutral off-white. Photo: NPS files.
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Rehabilitation. In a typical rehabilitation, more latitude exists in
choosing both the kind of new paint as well as color because the goal is
the efficient reuse of interior spaces. Decisions about new paint often
weigh factors such as economy and durability--use of a high quality standard
paint from a local or national company and application by a qualified contractor.
Color choices may be based on paint research reports prepared for interior
rooms of comparable date and style. More often, though, current color values
and taste are taken into account. Again, the safer paint formulations are
used.
Interiors of institutional buildings, such as university buildings, city
halls, libraries, and churches often contain rich decorative detailing. During rehabilitation, careful choices should be made to retain or
restore selected portions of the decorative work as well as match some of
the earlier colors to evoke the historic sense of time and place. At the
least, it is important to use periodtypical paint color and paint placement.
Restoration. In a restoration project, the goal is to depict the property
as it appeared during its period of greatest significance. This may or may
not be the time of its original construction. For example, if a building
dated from 1900 but historians deemed its significance to be the 1920s,
the appropriate paint color match would be the 1920s layer, not the original
1900 layer.
Based on historical research, onsite collection of paint samples, and
laboratory analysis, surface colors and treatments can be recreated to reflect
the property at a particular period of time. It should be noted that scholarly
findings may yield a color scheme that is not suited to the taste of the
contemporary owner, but is nonetheless historically accurate. In restoration,
personal taste in color is not at issue; the evidence should be strictly
followed.
In the restoration process, colors are custom-matched by professionals
to give an accurate representation. If an artist or artisan can be found,
the historically replicated paint may be applied using techniques appropriate
to the period of the restoration. Although custom paint
manufacture is seldom undertaken, color and glazing are capable of being
customized. In some projects, paint may be custom-made using linseed oil
and, if building code variances allow it, white lead. For example, the repainting
of a number of rooms at Mount Vernon demonstrates that it is possible to
replicate historic paints and applications in all aspects; however, as noted,
replication of historic paint formulation is not practical for the majority
of projects.