![]() ![]() Lay drop cloths on to protect the porch floor from splatter.The color should be close to that of the paint, e.g., a white, light gray, or light blue primer for a haint blue porch ceiling. ![]() If a separate paint and primer are needed, get primer labeled for exterior use.Choose a dedicated exterior paint (used in addition to a separate primer, discussed next) if painting over a stained wood porch ceiling, switching from a darker to a lighter paint color, or covering oil-based paint with a water-based product.Note that paint with a flat/matte sheen will minimize cracks and other imperfections. Opt for an oil-based paint for a ceiling made of metal (e.g., corrugated steel) or a type of wood that bleeds tannins (e.g., cedar) to prevent rust or bleed-through. If your porch ceiling wood doesn’t bleed (i.e., give off tinted compounds called tannins), go with water-based paint. Choose a mildew-resistant exterior primer-and-paint if painting a bare porch ceiling for the first time, repainting a previously painted surface the same color, or switching from a lighter to a darker hue.RELATED: Bob Vila’s Guide to Historic Paint Colors Today, however, there are still more blue porch ceilings in the American South than anywhere else. To this day, a range of pale blue-green hues is collectively known as “haint blue.”īlue porch ceilings also appeared in the Northwest (where the Aurora Colony, a Christian commune, was founded) as well as on East Coast Colonial and Victorian homes from Philadelphia to Boston. For good measure, the Gullah also often painted doors, window frames, and shutters the same shade. Gullah folklore held that ghosts-known as “haints” (and pronounced “haunts”) in the Creole dialect-could not cross water, and because blue resembles water, ceilings were painted this color to repel evil spirits. ![]() The tradition is rooted in Gullah culture.īlue porch ceilings first appeared at antebellum plantations of the early nineteenth century due to the tradition of the Gullah (a.k.a Geechee) people, enslaved African Americans in the coastal areas of Georgia and South Carolina. ![]() A post shared by Allison Lincoln on at 5:05pm PST ![]()
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