Spray Painted Patio Chairs

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Intro: Spray Painted Patio Chairs

How I painted some art chairs using Krylon spray paint.

Last fall I had some clients ask me to paint some old 50's style patio chairs in some animal print look. I decided on zebra and leopard and titled the pair "predator and prey".

STEP 1: Strip and Prime

The first thing is to strip the old paint and prime the surface. I disassembled the chairs and took a paint removal disc mounted to my angle grinder to remove the paint, sandpaper and/or chemical paint stripper will work just as well, I then used my random orbital sander to smooth the grinder marks left behind and to sand between coats of primer.

STEP 2: Painting

At the point I had decided to do this instructable I had already painted the zebra chair, but it's pretty straight forward. I painted three coats of Krylon gloss white paint then masked off and cut the stripes using images found on the web as reference, I then  painted three coats of Krylon gloss black and removed the mask and painted three coats of  Krylon crystal clear gloss.

I then reassembled the chair and moved on to the leopard chair.

STEP 3: Painting Part 2

I took the already primed parts and painted them with a base coat of gloss white followed by gloss pumpkin orange keeping in mind that the belly of a leopard is white and various shades of yellow/orange/brown up to the spine. I layered gloss khaki and gloss equestrian and gloss sun yellow and some more pumpkin orange until I was happy with the colors and gradations, there was also a little speckling where the paint had built up on the rim of the can and spilled off on to the parts, but I like the looked and it helped with the overall effect

STEP 4: Leopard Spots

I neglected to get photos of this step, but what I did was cut some holes in some heavy paper (you could use acetate also) like a shopping bag about an inch and a half to two inches for the spots. then holding the mask a couple of inches away from the surface I sprayed the gloss equestrian through the hole, this was done to confine the spray pattern to where I wanted it. I then took some more paper and cut 2 to 3 small elongated holes in an arc to go around the perimeter of the equestrian spots. using gloss black I went around each spot, loosely following my reference photos. I worked back and forth between the two pieces so as not to work on wet paint and smearing it and I used three different masks for the same reason as the paint builds up on the mask, so I would set one aside to dry as I used the others this also helps with the randomness.

STEP 5: The Finish

At this point I used Krylon crystal clear gloss and applied three coats, allowed to dry and reassembled the chairs, I then applied two more coats on the seats and backs and the arms of the chairs as these areas would see the most use.

2 Comments

These are amazing! great job!
Nice job! I like the theme and you had excellent tips on avoiding commom paint-smearing mistakes in step 4. It is important to know what NOT to do as well as what to do.