Painting a House: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(→Primer) |
(→Primer) |
||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
*Latex, oil, shellac [https://www.truevalue.com/diy-projects/post/paint-and-stain/choose-the-right-primer#:~:text=Oil%2Dbased%20primers%20are%20ideal,the%20surface%20of%20the%20paint.] | *Latex, oil, shellac [https://www.truevalue.com/diy-projects/post/paint-and-stain/choose-the-right-primer#:~:text=Oil%2Dbased%20primers%20are%20ideal,the%20surface%20of%20the%20paint.] | ||
*Oil-based works best on wood. | *Oil-based works best on wood. | ||
*Oil based - 1 [https://www.menards.com/main/paint/interior-paint-stain/primers-sealers/majic-paints-barricade-stain-killer-primer-5-gal/8-0068-5/p-1642874267516153-c-8028.htm] | |||
=Paint= | =Paint= |
Revision as of 17:00, 24 May 2023
- Interior paint job costs around $3/sf without ceiling or trim, and $5/sf with ceiling and trim. Seems like around $4/sf avg for whole house [1]. But this seems to be re-painting, thus higher for new paint?
- Paint lasts up to 400 sf/gal [2]
- You need 2+ coats starting from scratch.
- You need primer for raw wood, 2-in-1 paint/primer is for stuff that has been painted already.
- Bob Vila says similar.
Primer
Paint
- Use Pittsburgh [5]
Feeback
Catarina sez:
According to the links below, using the PVA/drywall primer on wood might not be the best idea.
Go with the oil-based primer. That won't raise the grain and will hopefully provide a smooth surface for the paint.
It's also possible that these stain-blocking primers all do the same job as the more expensive BIN primer that we're using on the ceiling. I just don't know...