Chalkboard paint isn’t new, but creative minds keep coming up with new ways to use it. Consider the dramatic wall calendar shown here. It began with a floor-to-ceiling coat of standard gray chalkboard paint. With the help of a yardstick, squares were drawn in pencil, then taped off. Three-fourths were filled in with different shades of light and medium gray, leaving the remaining squares the same color as the wall. The hardest part is coordinating the taping: After you paint the first set of squares, pull up the tape, wait a day, and put down a new line of tape to do the next set. Once it’s had a couple of days to cure, the chalkboard should last years. It’s the kind of project that might inspire a Harold wannabe to paint erasable surfaces almost anywhere, including tabletops and canisters. Can’t quite picture it? Click “Next.” Shown:Most chalkboard paint comes in a classic deep gray. A paint store can lighten a quart by adding white colorant. Back home, dark and light can be blended to get a couple of different shades in between.
Message Board
With the addition of chalkboard paint, a wood tray becomes a neatly framed reusable memo pad with a built-in resting place for a stick of chalk.
Scribble While You Wait
Budding artists can leave their mark on the kitchen table—without etching their name in ink.
Keep Track
Unfurl your to-do list down the length of the wall with a dramatic strip of blackboard paint. TOH Pro Tip: “A single coat of chalkboard paint should suffice, but if the surface gets lots of use, keep some handy for touch-ups.” —Carl Minchew, director of color technology, Benjamin Moore
Make Labels
Let opaque canisters reveal their contents with labels that are writ large and easily changed.