farm fresh pumpkins?

As I’ve mentioned in the past, I’m not really into Halloween/Fall decorating.  Unless you count a whisk broom wreath.

One other notable exception is the fairy garden.  I do like to dress that up for the season with a few tombstones and a skeleton rising up from the ground.

Those fairies are a bit ghoulish!

I like to add a few fall touches to the rest of the garden as well with a few mums and ornamental kale here and there, and of course there is my Farmers Market sign.

I consider that fall decor as well.  If you’ve followed me for a while you may remember that this sign is two-sided.  The other side is painted in a more springy/summery green (Dixie Belle’s Kudzu) and has a Flower Market stencil.

I also like to come up with some sort of painted pumpkins every now and then too.

Last year I mostly went neutral.

I painted them in Dixie Belle’s Dried Sage and Sawmill Gravy.  I finished some of the stems using DB’s Gilding Wax, and then added various transfers to them.

I did a few smaller pumpkins using re.design with prima’s Middy label transfers in some very non-traditional fall colors too.

I did something similar back in 2020 with neutral colors and transfers.

I tried my hand at some toile pumpkins back in 2018.

But I found it a bit tricky to apply the toile transfers so I ended up only creating one before discarding that idea.

I ended up selling all of my pumpkins last year except this one …

Perhaps that lovely Dixie Belle Sea Glass color just isn’t ‘fall’ enough for most people.

So I decided to schedule that one for a makeover, and I also pulled out a few other faux pumpkins that were in my stash.

This year I’ve decided to add a little patina to the pumpkins using Dixie Belle Patina Paint.

I started by giving all of them a base coat of Dixie Belle’s Caviar.  You can use any chalk paint as your base coat, or you can use the ‘official’ primer from the Patina Paint line.  I like to use black paint because I find it easiest to then cover up with the Iron patina paint, which is the paint I added next.

It’s important to note that I stipple the Iron paint on with a pouncing motion.  If you brush it on you will inevitably get brush marks, which will then collect the activating spray.  And then they look pretty obvious.

So, I stipple on a first coat of Iron paint and let it dry thoroughly.  Then I stipple on a fresh coat.  Before it had a chance to dry, I also stippled a bit of the Bronze patina paint around the pumpkin stems.  Then I sprayed it all with the Green patina spray while the paint was still wet.

Once the spray dried, I very lightly dry brushed a little more of the Bronze paint on the stems and around the pumpkin just a bit.

Seriously, how cool are these pumpkins?  I love the way they turned out!

One note here.  I painted and sprayed these in the morning, and took these photos that same evening.  Usually the rusty patina (Iron paint and green spray) takes several days to fully appear.  It also continues to develop more over time, especially if the item is out in the elements (you can learn more about that here).

Since I was on a bit of a roll with the fall decor, I decided to do a quick suitcase stencil job too.

This vintage suitcase was one that I had in my occasional sale, but no one snatched it up.  Likely because it has a water stain on the front edge.

But I thought it made the perfect canvas for the Farm Fresh stencil from Dixie Belle, and displaying it standing up rather than in a stack makes that water stain less ‘in your face’.

I stenciled it using Dixie Belle’s Coffee Bean paint and their Best Dang Brush which is my favorite brush for larger stencils.

Now this is my kind of fall decor.

Although ‘farm fresh’ might not be the best description of my patinaed pumpkins, what do you think?  And how would you display this vintage suitcase?  Leave a comment and let me know.

Thank you to Dixie Belle Paint Co for providing all of their products used in these fall makeovers.

12 thoughts on “farm fresh pumpkins?

  1. Love the bronzing! Many, many years ago, one of the acrylic paint companies came out with the 2-part blue/bronze paint and I used it on a lamp. It was really pretty…I have two small lamps in my closet that I don’t use — this might be perfect to try on them! Thanks for the reminder! Kathy

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    1. Some of those early paint kits were more of a faux painting technique. The Dixie Belle patina paint has actual flakes of metal in it that react with the spray to create genuine rust and/or verdigris patina. And IMHO, that makes it look so much more authentic! You should definitely give it a try!

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  2. wow! For someone who doesn’t do Halloween, you’re kicking it this year! LOVE everything and am so inspired! I laughed at the scary fairies, too, but the pumpkins are FABULOUS!

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