Paint disaster
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Paint disaster
Yesterday I painted two rooms in my house with waterbased paint, not knowing that the previous paint was oilbased. My question is what is the best way to get the waterbased paint off before it starts peeling, but the hard part is that I have a textured wall with alot of grooves. I think that this is a disaster, if any one could offer some help it would be appreciated.
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You're absolutely right, that would certainly qualify as a disaster.
How did you find out about the oil-based paint? contact a previous owner or sommat?
Well, most likely you're going to have a mess either way. You could use a mucosa-raping rancid solvent, but I would sand it until the previous coat just begins to get some shine on, then re-paint with another oil-based paint.
Good luck, real sorry to hear about your situation.
You filthy, home-improving gutter slut.
How did you find out about the oil-based paint? contact a previous owner or sommat?
Well, most likely you're going to have a mess either way. You could use a mucosa-raping rancid solvent, but I would sand it until the previous coat just begins to get some shine on, then re-paint with another oil-based paint.
Good luck, real sorry to hear about your situation.
You filthy, home-improving gutter slut.
Last edited by Underpants? on Tue Jan 09, 2007 2:39 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Yes I contacted the people who sold me the house, they informed me that the paint was oilbased. The paint is not peeling yet but i know its just a matter of time. I dont mind doing the work but I just want to figure out the easiest non-messy way to fix this fast. I have three weeks to make this room look like brand new...before i get an "I told you so"
It doesn’t make sense to strip it all off. Wait t’ill it dry, and may be ( I wish it for you ) that it will be ok, especially if you took the time to sand it first. May be, having a textured wall with a lot of grooves can help too.
Forgot to mention. The room temperature should be around 70/80F without humidity. Better dry then humid.
I am sure you will do fine.
Forgot to mention. The room temperature should be around 70/80F without humidity. Better dry then humid.
I am sure you will do fine.
Last edited by Pete on Tue Jan 09, 2007 3:04 am, edited 1 time in total.
I’ve paint may be more then 100 times t’ill now, because my father owns apt buildings for 35 years. The professional way to do a good paint job ( not a blow job ), is to first, wash, patch all the holes, scratches, with mud, then sand, then prime ( special primer for the repairs ). One prime coat, two finish coats.Tsakali_ wrote:I don't see why he would sand it first... he prolly didn't
I'm going out on a limb but it I'll say "It doesn't matter". A Google search comes up with this gem from the Paint Quality Institute:
The rule of thumb is that, given proper surface preparation, for exterior use you can apply quality latex paints over oil-based, but not the reverse. However, if you have many layers of oil based paint, stick to using oil on oil. For interior use, generally you can use one over the other. Some manufacturers of latex products will recommend a primer when going over oil-based paint.
I've painted a lot of walls and never had an adhesion problem.
http://www.paintquality.com/faq/Exterio ... aints.html
The rule of thumb is that, given proper surface preparation, for exterior use you can apply quality latex paints over oil-based, but not the reverse. However, if you have many layers of oil based paint, stick to using oil on oil. For interior use, generally you can use one over the other. Some manufacturers of latex products will recommend a primer when going over oil-based paint.
I've painted a lot of walls and never had an adhesion problem.
http://www.paintquality.com/faq/Exterio ... aints.html
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Thanks you guys, you've been alot of help (especially pete). Its been two weekends ago and the paint is holding up very well. No scratches or drips or anything. I have to do the living room and kitchen once I have my boyfriend home to help me, but I think I will take a little extra precautions there. Thanks so much. :icon25: