LIMEWASH

Limewash is one of the oldest paint finishes in existence, a mineral-based wash made from slaked lime that settles into walls with a softness no synthetic paint can replicate.

A person using a limwash brush to paint a wall with panel. Several paint cans, some with paint drips, are on the floor below the wall.
Person holding a fan of paint color swatches labeled Bauwerk, showing various shades of beige, brown, and grey.
A person with tattooed hands using a limewash paintbrush to paint a wall in a reddish color.
Person holding a paint can with red paint dripping down its sides, wearing a dark clothing.
Close-up of two wooden boards, one painted red and the other light blush, leaning against a beige wall.

LIMEWASH

Matte, chalky, and quietly luminous, limewash adds depth and texture through the very nature of how it's applied by hand, worked into the surface by brush, in layers, allowing subtle inconsistencies to emerge. Those inconsistencies are not imperfections. They are where the character lives.

The result is a finish that feels ancient and layered, a surface that changes with the light and improves with age. 

COLOUR STUDIO