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How to achieve a dark bronze finish painting furniture?

MelK
Community Newcomer

How to achieve a dark bronze finish painting furniture?

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Hi there! 
I am attempting to D.I.Y. some furniture and I have fell in love with this dark bronze finish you can see below. Any ideas how I can achieve this look with paint or another product? I’ve been suggested spray paint but it doesn’t have that same depth and variety like the images.

thanks!

 

MitchellMc
Bunnings Team Member
Bunnings Team Member

Re: How can I achieve this paint finish?

Welcome to the Bunnings Workshop community @MelK. It's a pleasure to have you join us, and many thanks for your question about achieving paint finishes.

That is a beautiful finish and you are right, straight spray paint on its own usually looks flat and uniform, which is why it lacks the depth and variation you are seeing in those images. What you are really looking at there is a layered decorative finish rather than a single colour coat.

 

The most achievable DIY approach is to start with a very smooth base and apply a solid dark base coat first, usually a deep charcoal or near black in a satin or low sheen. This creates the shadow and depth underneath. Once that has cured, you build the bronze effect over the top using a metallic decorative paint or liquid metal style finish, applied sparingly. Instead of full coverage, it is lightly worked on with a soft brush, sponge or lint free cloth so the darker base still shows through in areas. This variation is what gives that rich, burnished bronze look rather than a flat painted surface.

 

To really elevate it, many people then apply a subtle glaze or tinted clear over the metallic layer. A clear polyurethane or water-based clear with a small amount of brown or black tint can soften the metallic sparkle and add warmth, which helps replicate that aged, hand-finished appearance. Keeping everything in satin rather than gloss is important, as too much shine will immediately make it look painted instead of sculptural.

 

Surface preparation is critical, especially if this is MDF or timber furniture. The smoother the surface before you start, the more convincing the final result will be. While it does take more time than spraying a single can of paint, this layered method is what gives you that depth, movement and variation you are drawn to. It is very achievable as a DIY project if you are patient and test the process on a sample piece first, which I would strongly encourage before committing to the final item.

 

You might like to take a look at the Dulux Design Effects range. These are docorative paints that can be tinted to various colours and could provide the lustre required fr your project.

Please let me know if you have any questions.

Mitchell
 

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