Discover the ultimate DIY guide to creating a captivating interior stone wall in your home. Unleash your creativity and enhance your living space with our step-by-step instructions, tips, and tricks. Get ready to add a touch of timeless elegance and rustic charm to your interiors.
A unique design, the Romano Fluted Tile takes inspiration from ancient greek architecture with beautiful fluted detail that is found within the most luxurious hotels and homes. Finely crafted in-house with travertine, a natural stone that creates a distinctive and striking appearance. The muted base and amber tones are perfect for minimal and neutral interiors, adding a sense of warmth and texture to your home. Suitable for all wall spaces, each tile comes in a thickness of 17 mm and a size of 300 x 300 mm. The Romano Fluted Tile defines opulence and can be beautifully paired with our stone basins to create a mesmerising bathroom and a place of serenity.For more information on our tiles, including cleaning and care and how to measure your space, visit our buying guide.
Get custom buildings & assets for Dungeondraft. Floor textures, walls, rubble, assets for wood & stone building maps. Dungeondraft & PNG...
I promised that I'd show you pics of the bedroom now that it's painted, but before I can do that I have to share how we added texture to...
Seamless textures of concrete walls for free download. Free high quality Concrete Textures suitable for Photoshop and other design applcations.
Authentic rustic walls have an unmatched charming character. Medieval castles, ancient...
Mykonos is a premium limestone product that is perfect for both external and internal use. With its light hue and natural texture, it adds a touch of elegance to any landscape or architectural design. This versatile product can be used for a variety of purposes such as creating a feature wall, walling for gardens and outdoor spaces, and fireplaces. Its natural beauty and durability make it a popular choice for architects and designers looking to add a touch of luxury to their projects. Whether you’re looking to create a coastal-inspired landscape or add a feature wall to your home, Mykonos limestone is the perfect choice. It’s a timeless and elegant product that will add value and beauty to any space. Stone Style’s random walling range is designed to suit any project. Our range features a multitude of different materials in limestones, sandstones, granites, quartz and slates. Suitable for a wide array of applications from fireplaces, retaining walls to front fences.
The refined Fondo three-dimensional wall texture exalts stone through a pattern that is inspired by the flowing of the waves.
If you're remodeling your home and you're considering something unique for your wall texture, there are a lot of different styles to choose from. Each
25 van de 27 artikelen van de Endless collectie van Margres. Voorbeelden van gerealiseerde interieurs. Prijzen. Levering monsters binnen 24-48 uur
Pittosporum, Westringia and SantolinaBoth soothing and cohesive. These simple sweeps of soft shrubs really compliment the angular nature of the sandstone retaining walls. Awesome!!!
Tap into the beauty of stone with our affordable Landscape Collection. Made up of a flat stone option and a stacked option, these 3D mosaics have an organic appearance. Perfect to use in pool areas, on fireplaces, and even in spas. Browse all color options and find the best fit for your next project today. Step into a new kind of rustic luxury with the Landscape Collection, these natural stone mosaic collections take the raw nature of honed stones and marbles and create a textural landscape in several different shapes and sizes, perfect for both outdoor and indoor use. Landscape is perfect to use in pool areas, on decks, and even fireplaces, browse all color and format options and find the best fit for your next project today. Tap into the beauty of stone with our affordable Landscape Collection
I had always had a fascination with stones and rocks , their shape, colour, texture, tactile feel, the ability to change colour in water and their silent permanence. Hence, today’s selection.…
There's something about aged, weathered walls that give a room instant character. But...
It has been several months since we began this particular project, but we just brought it to pretty-much completion within the past couple days. Here is our new bedroom ceiling, complete with this then-on-sale chandelier from Home Depot: Yes, in fact, the appearance of that chandelier did inspire me to sing "Phantom of the Opera" at the top of my lungs not only while Rick hung it but also well into the next week! How did you know?! But let's rewind. You see, this was not a simple "let's paint the ceiling and hang a chandelier and sing an aria" job. Here's what the ceiling started out looking like: Personally, I'm not a fan of this particular brand of textured ceiling, even though I know it has Super Crack-Hiding Abilities. (Unlike my female students in their low-rise jeans, whose crack-hiding abilities rank right up there with my ability to, say, recite "The Road Less Taken" in Polish.) So, we googled around for some help without any real success, then asked a couple different workers at Lowe's if there was anything we could do about it. They both said NO and laughed at our sheer ignorance and naivety. (But did you see that first picture way up there?) I am here to tell you that these workers were obviously INCORRECT and should not have snickered quite so pompously and should maybe consider quitting their day job and instead taking up Polish. Left to our own devices, I remembered reading Kelly's tips about getting rid of a popcorn ceiling by spraying it with water, so we went ahead and soaked a corner of our drippy plaster ceiling, figuring that the plaster itself was water-based and would resort to its liquefied state. It did! A happy dance ensued. Said happy dance quickly came to a screeching halt when we realized how not-fun it is to mess around with a ceiling. Is it totally all worth it now, now that our arms no longer ache and our bodies are no longer coated in dust? Heck yes. Are we skipping off to go get started started on another ceiling? Heck no. With our plaster thoroughly saturated, we began scraping off the plaster drips with metal scrapers. After that, the ceiling looked like this: Better, but not flat. So the next step involved applying a new layer of joint compound to smooth out the still rough texture. I would recommend getting a scraper the size of your head and using fresh joint compound. You'll finish the ceiling in no time less than a day. (Rick says I should mention that we had to choose between applying a new layer of plaster with joint compound, or sand all of the remaining plaster until it was smooth. We tried skipping the new layer and going straight to sanding, but we likened it to painting the room with a mascara brush: completely slow, painful and inefficient.) So we slapped on a new layer of wet joint compound. If any of the steps were easy, this was it. Even I could do it with a fair amount of success and minimal to no whining. Here's a fantastically thrilling picture of what it looked like as it was drying: After the new layer of plaster was dry, the delightful job of sanding could commence. I'm not gonna lie: this step is, to date, the worst thing I have participated in during my brief career as a homeowner. Rick (aka The One With the Muscles) ended up doing most of it because he loves my biceps and my cheery disposition, both of which were seriously compromised when I began sanding the ceiling. After wiping down the entire ceiling and room with a wet cloth, we primed with Kilz stainblocker (the ceiling soaked up a lot of it--we used the entire gallon of primer and only half a gallon of actual paint) and then painted. I chose this lovely contrasting shade of pale blue (Valspar's Sweet Slumber): What? You mean you don't see any real color or contrast, only grayish white spots left by the sad coverage of our now never-to-be-used-again Olympic paint? This explains why I zoomed off to the nearest hardware store and bought a gallon of Benjamin Moore paint and primer in one, shade Glacier Blue. After all, we didn't spend all that time and energy scraping and sanding the ceiling for it to be more lame and less exciting than the sequels to Aladdin. He claims to not want a photo shoot. Divas these days. Really, why else would he be wearing those super swell safety goggles? ;) Next time, I, personally, will wear a rain bonnet when I cut in around the edge of the ceiling, seeing as how this time I ended up looking like one of those kids that sprays school colors in their hair on homecoming, only less cool. (Try to pretend you're surprised that I have a t-shirt with cats on it.) I'm really happy with how the ceiling looks with the walls (Valspar's Seashell Gray), and I think the shade of blue is bright enough to be noticeably pretty but not overpowering to the point where you feel like someone colored the entire ceiling with a blue highlighter. Hanging the Phantom of the Opera bling chandelier was the final touch. We had to use a swag hook to suspend it in the center of the room since the electric hook-up that used to be centered in the room is now not centered because we knocked out the imposing closet as part of our mission to make the upstairs floor plan feel not quite so 1897. That thing sparkles. Me likey. And now, for a brief history of our birdroom bedroom. I have to add that while it didn't make me sad to paint over the multitude of birdhouses, I am impressed by the time and hard work that someone spent on them. All that stenciling isn't my thing, but every single element was really so detailed and intricate, and a lot of love went into making it that way. I can appreciate that, you know? Hooray for progress. :) We still have to install new trim/baseboards and refinish the floor before we can move into our bedroom, but we congratulated ourselves on the completion of the ceiling by snuggling up with some hot chocolate (is summer over already?) and watching...The Phantom of the Opera. Rick thought that maybe it would put an end to my insistence on pretending to be an operatic soprano. It did not. It merely encouraged it. So: other tips for conquering textured ceilings? Practical venues for reciting Frost in languages other than English? Vocal exercises to flawlessly reach high Bs? Let's hear your thoughts. :) This post was brought to you by a dork who loves musical theater, bling, and masked men in boats.