Wood walls forge popular art appeal

This undated photo provided by Stikwood shows a baby room with a wood wall designed by Carrie Rodman. Wood walls are a strong decor trend, and they’re a far cry from the dowdy paneling of decades past. Reclaimed wood is sawed into thin planks that can be attached to walls using adhesive or adhesion strips ready for mounting directly out of the box.
This undated photo provided by Stikwood shows a baby room with a wood wall designed by Carrie Rodman. Wood walls are a strong decor trend, and they’re a far cry from the dowdy paneling of decades past. Reclaimed wood is sawed into thin planks that can be attached to walls using adhesive or adhesion strips ready for mounting directly out of the box.

The phrase "wood walls" should no longer conjure up images of gloomy paneled basements or cabins sheathed in dated, knotty pine. Today's wood walls are riding high on the decor trend curve.

photo

AP

This undated photo provided by wood artist Peter Glassford shows one of his collages made out of off-cuts of parota and rosa morada, two Central American hardwoods. The off-cuts come from furniture making. The positive response to his original wood art collages led him to create panels for the mass market, which can be used as screens, wall art and feature walls.

Some pay homage to wood walls' early or '50s roots. Wainscoting, that charm-filled wall treatment in old-timey Colonials and capes, might now be painted a dramatic deep violet, decked out with a lattice motif, or be given an exaggerated scale higher or lower than the standard chair rail.

Then there's the reclaimed wood wave, popularized by celebrity renovators Joanna and Chip Gaines of HGTV's Fixer Uppers series. The couple frequently uses rough-hewn boards from old barns and farmhouses. Fans of their Waco, Texas, store Magnolia Market can buy T-shirts hashtagged "shiplap."

Designers suggest creating feature walls with either a sleek contemporary look or a rustic modern vibe. Horizontal, vertical, herringbone or mosaic patterns add depth and dimension.

Peter Glassford of San Antonio fused his studio art background and his marketing and design job with a high-end Mexican furniture maker to create sculptural installations with the tropical hardwood off-cuts left over from furniture making. He now produces mass-market collage squares representative of his original signed art. The dramatic 3-D designs, which can be lacquered in custom hues, evoke the abstract expressionist work of American sculptor Louise Nevelson. See examples at peterglassford.com.

"Each panel is unique, like a small curation of random shapes that celebrates chance, free of patterns," Glassford says.

Architects are adding wood feature walls to contemporary houses. Angela Robinson used horizontal boards on a bedroom wall at Inn the Estuary, a bed and breakfast in Nanoose Bay, British Columbia. The panels blend a modern sensibility with a respect for the wilderness.

"I love to incorporate natural textures and materials," Robinson says. "Wood adds warmth and, depending on how it's finished, can make a space feel more traditional, contemporary, rustic or refined."

When using wood, appreciate its characteristics, Robinson advises.

"Keep in mind that wood is a natural material that dents, scratches, swells and ages in time. I think that the more wood is used and aged, the more unique and beautiful it looks."

Woodworker Jerry McCall of Sacramento, Calif., band-saws reclaimed wood into thin planks that can be adhered to a wall with adhesive or peel-and-stick tabs. His company, Stikwood, offers weathered versions of the planks, as well as oak, fir, maple and cherry boards. Salvaged flooring from sports arenas, complete with game markings, makes a unique statement.

McCall thinks the appeal lies in wood's warmth, history and a comfort and calmness it brings to a space.

"[Wood is] the perfect antidote to the chaos of our modern lives," he says.

HomeStyle on 08/27/2016

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