Unfortunately, flat paints attract dirt, which is less likely to adhere
to high gloss surfaces, and are thus harder to wash. Victorians tended to
use high gloss clear (or tinted) finishes such as varnish or shellac on
much of their wood trim and to use flat or oil paints on walls and ceilings.
 The task of preserving or restoring decorative work, such as the complex stencilling shown here, should only be undertaken by professionals who have specialized training. Photo: Alexis Elza.
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Decorative Painting. In interiors, paint could be used creatively and
imaginatively, most often to decorate rather than to protect. Decorative
forms included stencilling, graining and marbleizing, and trompe l'oeil. Stencilling. Stencilled designs on walls were often
used in the first half of the 19th century in place of wallpaper. Old Sturbridge
Village, in Massachusetts, has paintings showing the interiors of a (c.
1815-1820) farmhouse which has both stencilled walls--imitating wallpaper--and
painted floors or oiled and painted floor cloths, imitating fine carpets.
By 1850 and for the next 60 years thereafter, stencilled and freehandpainted
decoration for walls and ceilings became a high as well as a humble art.
Owen Jones' Grammar of Ornament, published in 1859, provided the source
for painted decoration from Portland to Peoria, Savannah to San Francisco.
Historic doors may have graining patterns or clear finishes under one or several coats of plain paint, such as these restored 18th and 19th century doors. Photo: Jack E. Boucher, HABS, NPS.
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Graining and marbleizing. If floors, walls, and ceilings were decorated
by paint in a variety of styles, the wood and stone trim of rooms was not
omitted. The use of faux bois, that is, painting a plain or common wood
such as pine to look like mahogany or some finer wood, or faux marbre, painting
a wood or plaster surface to look like marble--realistically or fantastically--was
common in larger homes of the 18th century. By the early 19th century, both
stylized graining and marbleizing adorned the simple rural or small town
houses as well. Often baseboards and stair risers were marbleized as were
fireplace surrounds. Plain slate was painted to look like fine Italian marble.
In many simple buildings, and, later, in the Victorian period, many prominent
buildings such as town halls and churches, the wood trim was given a realistic
graining to resemble quarter sawn oak, walnut, or a host of other exotic
woods.
Trompe L'oeil. Churches, courthouses, and state capitols frequently received
yet another remarkable use of paint: trompe l'oeil decoration. Applied by
skilled artists and artisans, painted designs--most often using distemper
paints or oils--could replicate threedimensional architectural detailing
such as ornate molded plaster moldings, medallions, panels, and more.