Mom's Homemade Whitewash Mom made it from nothing more than a thin liquid plaster made from slaked lime and water, and a couple of T of canning salt to make it "wear" well. If she wanted a grayish color she added soot or wood ashes. You can thin by adding more water, but don't try to thicken it by adding more lime. It needs to soak awhile for the lime and water mixture to turn into "calcium", and if you do add more lime, you need to allow extra time for the transition to take place. There are "water-based" coloring one can use if you desire to make your white wash...yellow wash for instance. Yellow is known to attract beneficial insects. Green seems to help green veggies produce better, and the color red seems to help red veggies preform better tho studies are still in progress on this topic. Sometimes Mom used a couple of egg whites mixed in the whitewash as a "binder" if she wanted a more permanant paint to last longer than one season. She said that lime and water, salt and egg whites would make the same "paint" that Hick Finn painted the fence with. She has been known to use 1 gallon of milk, about 6 pounds of slaked lime, 1/2 cup of linseed oil, and half a cupped hand of canning salt, when she was painting something she wanted the paint to last longer on. She used colored chalk for pigments other than just white, and said that if I wanted to paint something a color other than white, to put one or two coats of just "white" on first, then the color as the last coat. Jon