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#1
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Does anyone know a good way to get dried house paint out of the bristles of
a synthetic house brush? I hate to say it is my favorite brush and i have allowed house paint to dry into the deep bristles so it is no longer supple. I have been painting on the house about an hour a day for the past month. I have been keeping the brush after use in plastic bags and then closed into an empty paint can with a few drops of water in the bottom out of the sun but I have ended up with drying in the deep bristles anyway. I know that the things are not that expensive but the newer ones do not appear to have the bristle "bulk" of this one, so saving it actually is my aim here. I put it through the wash cycle of the washing machine twice yesterday with detergent but that did not seem to work either. Thanks FACE |
#2
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FACE wrote:
Does anyone know a good way to get dried house paint out of the bristles of a synthetic house brush? I hate to say it is my favorite brush and i have allowed house paint to dry into the deep bristles so it is no longer supple. I have been painting on the house about an hour a day for the past month. I have been keeping the brush after use in plastic bags and then closed into an empty paint can with a few drops of water in the bottom out of the sun but I have ended up with drying in the deep bristles anyway. I know that the things are not that expensive but the newer ones do not appear to have the bristle "bulk" of this one, so saving it actually is my aim here. I put it through the wash cycle of the washing machine twice yesterday with detergent but that did not seem to work either. Thanks FACE Try a wire brush. -- Robert Allison Rimshot, Inc. Georgetown, TX |
#3
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![]() FACE wrote: Does anyone know a good way to get dried house paint out of the bristles of a synthetic house brush? I hate to say it is my favorite brush and i have allowed house paint to dry into the deep bristles so it is no longer supple. I have been painting on the house about an hour a day for the past month. I have been keeping the brush after use in plastic bags and then closed into an empty paint can with a few drops of water in the bottom out of the sun but I have ended up with drying in the deep bristles anyway. I know that the things are not that expensive but the newer ones do not appear to have the bristle "bulk" of this one, so saving it actually is my aim here. I put it through the wash cycle of the washing machine twice yesterday with detergent but that did not seem to work either. Thanks FACE Greetings, You can get it off with one of a dozen solvents (not water) but if paint has dried on your brush it is best to toss it. They still make high quality brushes. The "new ones" aren't lower quality-- they are all qualities at all different prices. You just need to go purchase one to your liking. Maybe the store you went to didn't have the brush you wanted and you gave up but I guarantee you it is available. Hope this helps, William |
#4
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![]() "FACE" wrote in message ... Does anyone know a good way to get dried house paint out of the bristles of a synthetic house brush? I hate to say it is my favorite brush and i have allowed house paint to dry into the deep bristles so it is no longer supple. I have been painting on the house about an hour a day for the past month. I have been keeping the brush after use in plastic bags and then closed into an empty paint can with a few drops of water in the bottom out of the sun but I have ended up with drying in the deep bristles anyway. I know that the things are not that expensive but the newer ones do not appear to have the bristle "bulk" of this one, so saving it actually is my aim here. I put it through the wash cycle of the washing machine twice yesterday with detergent but that did not seem to work either. Thanks FACE Soak in Lacquer thinner overnight ( they do sell a brush cleaner) then comb with a wire brush. After all that work their never the same they just plain wear out that's why I have crapy brushes and good brushes. If I am painting for along period I will stop and clean my brush a couple times during painting. When I'm done I always comb the brushes. They just don't last forever. |
#5
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![]() FACE wrote: Does anyone know a good way to get dried house paint out of the bristles of a synthetic house brush? I hate to say it is my favorite brush and i have allowed house paint to dry into the deep bristles so it is no longer supple. I have been painting on the house about an hour a day for the past month. I have been keeping the brush after use in plastic bags and then closed into an empty paint can with a few drops of water in the bottom out of the sun but I have ended up with drying in the deep bristles anyway. I know that the things are not that expensive but the newer ones do not appear to have the bristle "bulk" of this one, so saving it actually is my aim here. I put it through the wash cycle of the washing machine twice yesterday with detergent but that did not seem to work either. Thanks FACE You may get some of the gunk out with dish washing detergent and hot water (soak), then try to spread a few bristles at a time and scrape with your fingernail (works for me ![]() in foil and put in the freezer. |
#6
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FACE wrote:
Does anyone know a good way to get dried house paint out of the bristles of a synthetic house brush? I hate to say it is my favorite brush and i have allowed house paint to dry into the deep bristles so it is no longer supple. I have been painting on the house about an hour a day for the past month. I have been keeping the brush after use in plastic bags and then closed into an empty paint can with a few drops of water in the bottom out of the sun but I have ended up with drying in the deep bristles anyway. I know that the things are not that expensive but the newer ones do not appear to have the bristle "bulk" of this one, so saving it actually is my aim here. I put it through the wash cycle of the washing machine twice yesterday with detergent but that did not seem to work either. Thanks FACE For this condition, I've successfully used white vinegar to soak brushes overnight before. |
#7
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![]() "FACE" wrote in message ... Does anyone know a good way to get dried house paint out of the bristles of a synthetic house brush? I hate to say it is my favorite brush and i have allowed house paint to dry into the deep bristles so it is no longer supple. I have been painting on the house about an hour a day for the past month. I have been keeping the brush after use in plastic bags and then closed into an empty paint can with a few drops of water in the bottom out of the sun but I have ended up with drying in the deep bristles anyway. I know that the things are not that expensive but the newer ones do not appear to have the bristle "bulk" of this one, so saving it actually is my aim here. I put it through the wash cycle of the washing machine twice yesterday with detergent but that did not seem to work either. Thanks FACE You did say synthetic bristles right ? Any solvent that will soften the paint will turn the whole brush to goo. This calls for, last shot, drastic action as there is no other choice, and nothing to lose. Make sure it's perfectly dry. Lay the brush on a concrete floor, and wolllop the bristles repeatedly with a steel hammer. (for more harmless fun, pretend it's that idiot neighbor down the street who pokes their nose into everyone's business, or your boss, or ex-wife/husband) LOL Turn the brush over and do it some more. Keep going and soon the paint will turn to powder. Wash it out in soapy water, and dry. repeat as many times as needed. The brush will never be "like new" but I've salvaged countless brushes I've gotten back filled with dry paint after lending them to people this way. (and guess which ones are the only ones I now loan out) AMUN |
#8
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Quick addendum :
For natural bristles, you can soak it in some oil for a few days and the latex paint should peel right off AMUN "Amun" wrote in message .. . "FACE" wrote in message ... Does anyone know a good way to get dried house paint out of the bristles of a synthetic house brush? I hate to say it is my favorite brush and i have allowed house paint to dry into the deep bristles so it is no longer supple. I have been painting on the house about an hour a day for the past month. I have been keeping the brush after use in plastic bags and then closed into an empty paint can with a few drops of water in the bottom out of the sun but I have ended up with drying in the deep bristles anyway. I know that the things are not that expensive but the newer ones do not appear to have the bristle "bulk" of this one, so saving it actually is my aim here. I put it through the wash cycle of the washing machine twice yesterday with detergent but that did not seem to work either. Thanks FACE You did say synthetic bristles right ? Any solvent that will soften the paint will turn the whole brush to goo. This calls for, last shot, drastic action as there is no other choice, and nothing to lose. Make sure it's perfectly dry. Lay the brush on a concrete floor, and wolllop the bristles repeatedly with a steel hammer. (for more harmless fun, pretend it's that idiot neighbor down the street who pokes their nose into everyone's business, or your boss, or ex-wife/husband) LOL Turn the brush over and do it some more. Keep going and soon the paint will turn to powder. Wash it out in soapy water, and dry. repeat as many times as needed. The brush will never be "like new" but I've salvaged countless brushes I've gotten back filled with dry paint after lending them to people this way. (and guess which ones are the only ones I now loan out) AMUN |
#9
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Amun wrote:
.... You did say synthetic bristles right ? Any solvent that will soften the paint will turn the whole brush to goo. .... Not true... There are any number of "brush restorer" products that will work well. I've found a couple of the newer citric-based to work quite well, in fact. Takes a couple of days sitting, but if the brush is a real quality brush, well worth the time and definitely not the abuse. |
#10
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On Tue, 06 Sep 2005 08:09:25 -0400, FACE
wrote: Does anyone know a good way to get dried house paint out of the bristles of a synthetic house brush? I hate to say it is my favorite brush and i have allowed house paint to dry into the deep bristles so it is no longer supple. I have been painting on the house about an hour a day for the past month. I have been keeping the brush after use in plastic bags and then closed into an empty paint can with a few drops of water in the bottom out of the sun but I have ended up with drying in the deep bristles anyway. I know that the things are not that expensive but the newer ones do not appear to have the bristle "bulk" of this one, so saving it actually is my aim here. I put it through the wash cycle of the washing machine twice yesterday with detergent but that did not seem to work either. Thanks FACE Wrapping and refrigerating is OK for a ****ty brush, but if you use good ones (and they do work allot better), buy a brush spinner and clean them often. On a hot day I clean em every two or three hours. For latex use "Fantastic" or some other super cleaner with water. A brush comb is a good idea. |
#11
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![]() Duane Bozarth wrote in message ... I've found a couple of the newer citric-based to work quite well, in fact. Takes a couple of days sitting, but if the brush is a real quality brush, well worth the time and definitely not the abuse. Second the citrus solvent. I used the zep citrus degreaser from home depot and big orange citrus degreaser from smart and final (socal) - they both work on the housepaint (latex and enamel) when left in overnight or for some time in sunluight (to get the elevated temps)They also take the print (and resins)right off circular saw blades. Pat |
#12
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On Tue, 06 Sep 2005 08:09:25 -0400, in alt.home.repair FACE
wrote: Does anyone know a good way to get dried house paint out of the bristles of a synthetic house brush? I hate to say it is my favorite brush and i have allowed house paint to dry into the deep bristles so it is no longer supple. I have been painting on the house about an hour a day for the past month. I have been keeping the brush after use in plastic bags and then closed into an empty paint can with a few drops of water in the bottom out of the sun but I have ended up with drying in the deep bristles anyway. I know that the things are not that expensive but the newer ones do not appear to have the bristle "bulk" of this one, so saving it actually is my aim here. I put it through the wash cycle of the washing machine twice yesterday with detergent but that did not seem to work either. Thanks FACE A big thanks to all that have replied. All sound like good ideas. The in-the-freezer-overnight will become a new thing of mine. Hopefully the Miz will accept that along with the caulk and spackling knives in the drainer. :-) (I am still convinced that the best caulk smoother in a corner joint is my fingertip.) The solvents are also attractive. I had considered gasoline overnight but that may turn the synthetic bristles to goo as someone said. However, white vinegar sounds pretty benign. Besides giving me a good laugh, beating the bristles with a hammer and powdering the dry paint then combing it out also sounds reasonable. I just bought a new wire brush since one I have had for years I have worn out in the previous 5 weeks. Combing the body of the bristles sounds good too, and maybe the fact that I did wear out the other wire brush (the first seven rows of the sixteen rows of bristles are now gone) on flaking and otherwise 'bad areas' on the old paint and boards should tell me something -- like painting a coupla thousand square feet of rough cedar siding just may be nearing the limit on this brush anyway. I have used it for the porch and basically touch up jobs for about 5 years but never for this much -- i am repainting the entire house and have double-coated some areas that are in intense sun. Seems I found the right newsgroup to ask this, I am looking at some "situations" in this endeavor that I have not tackled before and may be back for advice. G Question to Pat: Do you use the Big Orange citrus cleaner full strength or in a dilution? I am also using Zep housewash. All in all, thanks to all, FACE |
#13
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FACE wrote:
.... A big thanks to all that have replied. All sound like good ideas. I don't know about beating on it w/ a hammer... ![]() The in-the-freezer-overnight will become a new thing of mine. .. Just clean the damn brush when you've finished using it and get avoid of the problem...doesn't take 30 minutes and is far better for the brush. The one thing whoever talked about solvents had correct is that removing dried paint from a brush is never absolutely complete and the brush will not be as good as it was, ever. How much you lose depends on how bad you let it get and how good a brush it was originally. The solvents are also attractive. I had considered gasoline overnight but that may turn the synthetic bristles to goo as someone said. However, white vinegar sounds pretty benign. Besides giving me a good laugh, beating the bristles with a hammer and powdering the dry paint then combing it out also sounds reasonable. Not if you want a decent brush to work with when you're done. You'll break darn near every bristle and weaken those you don't. You'll be picking bristles out of the paint continuously. I just bought a new wire brush ... A bristle brush is not a common wire brush. .... Question to Pat: Do you use the Big Orange citrus cleaner full strength or in a dilution? I am also using Zep housewash. Not Pat, but you use it according the instructions on the container. Don't know the particular brand and sometimes the same brands are sold in both concentrate or ready-to-use containers. |
#14
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![]() "patrick mitchel" wrote in message ... Duane Bozarth wrote in message ... I've found a couple of the newer citric-based to work quite well, in fact. Takes a couple of days sitting, but if the brush is a real quality brush, well worth the time and definitely not the abuse. Second the citrus solvent. I used the zep citrus degreaser from home depot and big orange citrus degreaser from smart and final (socal) - they both work on the housepaint (latex and enamel) when left in overnight or for some time in sunluight (to get the elevated temps)They also take the print (and resins)right off circular saw blades. Pat All well and good ,and some may want to try it. But the OP did say "synthetic" paint brush. All of those "citrus" cleaners are still oil based and may be great on a real bristle brush. (that water based products might damage) But watch which plastics you try to clean. ![]() Check the label and I'll bet in all the small print it tells you to be careful with some plastics You missed the part where I stressed the hammer method was "last shot, drastic action as there is no other choice, and nothing to lose." Perhaps I could have been clearer and said "after nothing else works, just before you are ready to toss the brush, but you STILL want to try saving it." Better ? AMUN |
#15
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Amun wrote:
.... All of those "citrus" cleaners are still oil based and may be great on a real bristle brush. (that water based products might damage) Water-based products won't "damage" any brush I've ever seen made for painting. Some might not flow as well or hold the optimum amount of paint but that's going overboard w/ caution, imo. .... You missed the part where I stressed the hammer method was "last shot, drastic action as there is no other choice, and nothing to lose." But time...might as well just pitch it and save the trouble. Perhaps I could have been clearer and said "after nothing else works, just before you are ready to toss the brush, but you STILL want to try saving it." Better ? Not really imo. The brush restorer technique is far preferable both in what it will do to the brush and the probability of success. Quite far gone brushes can be pretty frequently brought back to at least usability that way. I'd think the probability of having something useful for other than a parts-washing grease brush would be essentially zero after beating on it w/ a hammer extensively. |
#16
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FACE wrote:
However, white vinegar sounds pretty benign. You'll be pleasantly surprised at the outcome. -- WARNING: Do NOT under any circumstances take advice from an idiot named AMUN. AMUN is a clueless moron regarding tile, electrical and various other construction issues. As things go AMUN will (thankfully) dissapear as his kind usually does when confronted with their bad advice by those who are knowledgeable in their respective fields. |
#17
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Prior to dipping a brush into finish precondition it by dipping the
bristles into the proper solvent including the ferrule. Remove excess solvent and start finishing. Stops finish from drying near the ferrule making bristles stiff and aids cleaning after brushing. On Tue, 06 Sep 2005 08:09:25 -0400, FACE wrote: Does anyone know a good way to get dried house paint out of the bristles of a synthetic house brush? |
#18
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![]() "G Henslee" wrote in message ... FACE wrote: However, white vinegar sounds pretty benign. You'll be pleasantly surprised at the outcome. Silly git. The OP wants to clean a BRUSH Not a "BUSH". Keep your vinegar & water/feminine hygiene products to yourself. g AMUN |
#19
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![]() "Duane Bozarth" wrote in message ... Amun wrote: ... All of those "citrus" cleaners are still oil based and may be great on a real bristle brush. (that water based products might damage) Water-based products won't "damage" any brush I've ever seen made for painting. Some might not flow as well or hold the optimum amount of paint but that's going overboard w/ caution, imo. Beg to differ and most professional painters and furniture refinishers who know their stuff will verify this. Brush websites should have it too. If you know a real pro who uses paint brushes daily, go ask the loan of a natural bristle brush to put on that next coat of latex in your livingroom. And count the number of times they use "naughty words" No natural bristle brush should be used for any water based finishes, or even cleaned with water. Oil based paints stains, urethanes only. You can, but the bristles will split, fray and go funny. After a few times in water, you just toss it, because you will never get a decent finish with it. Few know this, and most of the jerks at the big box stores won't often know the reason they sell both types either. Synthetic bristles are not just more popular just because they are often cheaper, but as most people use latex/water based paints, they simply work better. And there are some synthetic bristles that are also for oil based products, but these are usually as pricy as the natural ones. If you just want to slap some paint on, and don't really care, use what you want, but sometimes there are reasons that some paint brushes cost 49 cents and some cost $50.00+. AMUN |
#20
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Amun wrote:
"Duane Bozarth" wrote in message ... Amun wrote: ... All of those "citrus" cleaners are still oil based and may be great on a real bristle brush. (that water based products might damage) Water-based products won't "damage" any brush I've ever seen made for painting. Some might not flow as well or hold the optimum amount of paint but that's going overboard w/ caution, imo. Beg to differ and most professional painters and furniture refinishers who know their stuff will verify this. .... There's a difference (as I noted) between using a brush for what it isn't designed for and "damaging" the brush simply by getting it wet. I don't believe there's any indication that simply water on a natural bristle brush, for example, well actually damage the brush once it's dried again. A pamphlet entitled "Care and Feeding" came w/ a brush includes the following advice-- "A natural bristle brush includes badger, hog (or china) bristle, sable, squirrel, goat, ox hair and others. These natural bristle brushes are hand-set and some of the hairs will be of different lengths. Consequently you may find the brush will shed some the first few times you will use it. To minimize this, you should: 1.Wash the brush with a mild dish soap in warm water ..." |
#21
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On Tue, 06 Sep 2005 13:16:23 -0400, in alt.home.repair FACE
wrote: Seems I found the right newsgroup to ask this, I am looking at some "situations" in this endeavor that I have not tackled before and may be back for advice. G Question to Pat: Do you use the Big Orange citrus cleaner full strength or in a dilution? I am also using Zep housewash. All in all, thanks to all, FACE After the last two days of cleaning the brush was supple enough to use again so I did my 100 square feet of housepainting on the second story (split level, 3 two story sides)from the extension ladder yesterday afternoon. Sure, 30 years ago i would have done 1000 square feet or so in a day but this is not 30 years ago. :-) That I have only been doing an average of 100 square feet a day is the reason i have not been washing the brush out everyday but looking for ways to keep it from day to day and washing it maybe once a week...or two. And that is how I ended up with dried paint in the bristles. I got enough out in the past two days, including the fingernail bit someone suggested to go with it yesterday. The brush, complete with it's 6 oz of paint, overnighted, well wrapped, in the freezer. I put it in just after I had finished my painting yesterday afternoon. Another day, another 100 square feet, maybe 200!, this afternoon. Weather is beautiful for this I started my other soon-to-be-sold house in late june and just the front split-level face over there lasted through July. All but the face of that house is well shaded and the rest does not need paint nor is the new paint on the face, which bakes in the sun daily, obviously different from the rest. Same situation over here except since this house has not been fully painted in 11 years other than area touch-up and front trim and painting the chimney chase twice and I am doing the whole thing. FACE |
#22
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FACE wrote:
On Tue, 06 Sep 2005 13:16:23 -0400, in alt.home.repair FACE wrote: Seems I found the right newsgroup to ask this, I am looking at some "situations" in this endeavor that I have not tackled before and may be back for advice. G Question to Pat: Do you use the Big Orange citrus cleaner full strength or in a dilution? I am also using Zep housewash. All in all, thanks to all, FACE After the last two days of cleaning the brush was supple enough to use again so I did my 100 square feet of housepainting on the second story (split level, 3 two story sides)from the extension ladder yesterday afternoon. Sure, 30 years ago i would have done 1000 square feet or so in a day but this is not 30 years ago. :-) That I have only been doing an average of 100 square feet a day is the reason i have not been washing the brush out everyday but looking for ways to keep it from day to day and washing it maybe once a week...or two. And that is how I ended up with dried paint in the bristles. I got enough out in the past two days, including the fingernail bit someone suggested to go with it yesterday. The brush, complete with it's 6 oz of paint, overnighted, well wrapped, in the freezer. I put it in just after I had finished my painting yesterday afternoon. Another day, another 100 square feet, maybe 200!, this afternoon. Weather is beautiful for this I started my other soon-to-be-sold house in late june and just the front split-level face over there lasted through July. All but the face of that house is well shaded and the rest does not need paint nor is the new paint on the face, which bakes in the sun daily, obviously different from the rest. Same situation over here except since this house has not been fully painted in 11 years other than area touch-up and front trim and painting the chimney chase twice and I am doing the whole thing. FACE Whooee, and I though I was slow! 100 sq ft is less than 13 feet linear on an 8 foot wall. That shouldn't be an all day job. I can do a side of a house, about 500 sq ft, in a day so that it takes me about 4 days. Then another 2 days for trim. Other friends claim they can paint their house in 2 days, maybe one more for trim. So I though I was about the slowest painter around. I think most of your problem is how slow your are and how long the paint brush is out in the air. If you are going that slow, you need to be dipping that brush in water at least every 1/2 hour. Waste a little paint but you will paint faster and better. |
#23
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On Wed, 07 Sep 2005 22:34:06 GMT, in alt.home.repair "George E. Cawthon"
wrote: Whooee, and I though I was slow! 100 sq ft is less than 13 feet linear on an 8 foot wall. Yep. That's about right. On each patch, i feather it out on the edges and the next day feather it in so it doesn't look like a start/stop job. :-) That shouldn't be an all day job. Who said I was out there all day? :-) Most days are about 1 hour or a little less in actually painting that 100 sq feet from an extension ladder. Some days I get really squirrelly and spend over 2 hours painting! If I am am doing a lower portion from the ground, i do more square footage and paint for a longer time, but i feel sure that is about the same with a lot of people. I can do a side of a house, about 500 sq ft, in a day so that it takes me about 4 days. Then another 2 days for trim. Other friends claim they can paint their house in 2 days, maybe one more for trim. So I though I was about the slowest painter around. I think the last time i had this house professionally painted it took 4 days -- last day was a partial for the trim. That's when I was paying over a grand for someone else to do it though. He wore out a $30 horsehair brush on this job. I think most of your problem is how slow your are and how long the paint brush is out in the air. If you are going that slow, you need to be dipping that brush in water at least every 1/2 hour. Waste a little paint but you will paint faster and better. I sure do feel bad about doing it so slow. ;-) The other side of the coin is that i am doing it at all. I will keep your suggestion in mind about dipping the brush. FACE |
#24
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FACE wrote:
On Wed, 07 Sep 2005 22:34:06 GMT, in alt.home.repair "George E. Cawthon" wrote: Whooee, and I though I was slow! 100 sq ft is less than 13 feet linear on an 8 foot wall. Yep. That's about right. On each patch, i feather it out on the edges and the next day feather it in so it doesn't look like a start/stop job. :-) That shouldn't be an all day job. Who said I was out there all day? :-) Most days are about 1 hour or a little less in actually painting that 100 sq feet from an extension ladder. Some days I get really squirrelly and spend over 2 hours painting! If I am am doing a lower portion from the ground, i do more square footage and paint for a longer time, but i feel sure that is about the same with a lot of people. I can do a side of a house, about 500 sq ft, in a day so that it takes me about 4 days. Then another 2 days for trim. Other friends claim they can paint their house in 2 days, maybe one more for trim. So I though I was about the slowest painter around. I think the last time i had this house professionally painted it took 4 days -- last day was a partial for the trim. That's when I was paying over a grand for someone else to do it though. He wore out a $30 horsehair brush on this job. I think most of your problem is how slow your are and how long the paint brush is out in the air. If you are going that slow, you need to be dipping that brush in water at least every 1/2 hour. Waste a little paint but you will paint faster and better. I sure do feel bad about doing it so slow. ;-) The other side of the coin is that i am doing it at all. I will keep your suggestion in mind about dipping the brush. FACE Sorry, I might have missed some of the earlier thread that indicated you were painting only a short time each day. Personally, I couldn't stand it painting a little each day forever. I want to get it done and over with. Now, my doors take forever since I can only do two or three on one side each day because of space and other considerations (like I want a bathroom with a door). ![]() |
#25
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FACE wrote:
Question to Pat: Do you use the Big Orange citrus cleaner full strength or in a dilution? I am also using Zep housewash. I use it full strength for overnight soaking (after turning the brush upside down and massaging the solvent into the ferrule to deg to the paint that has gotten that far) then clean with warm water and repaeat till i get the flexibility that I want. The citrus cleaners are still solvents so you might want to use a waterproof glove. I didn't and did not suffer any skin problems. Now, as to my liver - who the heck knows. Pat |
#26
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On Thu, 08 Sep 2005 03:20:57 GMT, in alt.home.repair "George E. Cawthon"
wrote: I sure do feel bad about doing it so slow. ;-) The other side of the coin is that i am doing it at all. I will keep your suggestion in mind about dipping the brush. FACE Sorry, I might have missed some of the earlier thread that indicated you were painting only a short time each day. Personally, I couldn't stand it painting a little each day forever. I want to get it done and over with. Now, my doors take forever since I can only do two or three on one side each day because of space and other considerations (like I want a bathroom with a door). ![]() No problem, George. I had not mentioned the why of any of it because i did not think it was really relevant to getting dried paint out of the brush. FACE |
#27
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On Wed, 7 Sep 2005 22:13:13 -0700, in alt.home.repair "patrick mitchel"
wrote: FACE wrote: Question to Pat: Do you use the Big Orange citrus cleaner full strength or in a dilution? I am also using Zep housewash. I use it full strength for overnight soaking (after turning the brush upside down and massaging the solvent into the ferrule to deg to the paint that has gotten that far) then clean with warm water and repaeat till i get the flexibility that I want. The citrus cleaners are still solvents so you might want to use a waterproof glove. I didn't and did not suffer any skin problems. Now, as to my liver - who the heck knows. Pat Thanks. The Zep was actually the more inexpensive available. The previous housewash I was using said on the label on some types of surfaces to rinse immediately to prevent etching and that sent me a big flag that said ACID. The Zep does not say that on the label and has similar dilution instructions for various jobs but I called the 800 number to the manufacturer inquiring as to whether I could mix hypochlorite(clorox) with it and they told me no that it was acidic. The Zep I have gives a 64:1 dilution for pressure washing, down to 10:1 for intense cleaning jobs. I will be using it at 28:1 and applying with a scrub brush and letting it dry -- I consider that the old paint in the sun-baked front has enough oxidation to take into consideration. The color is Blue Slate but it is a lot lighter than it originally was. I will first try the white vinegar treatment and if no joy will go to the Zep at full strength. FACE |
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The active ingredient in OOPS is Xylene, it cheaper to buy a quart at Home Depot, etc. than OOPS. It will dissolve latex paint and not harm the brush. |
#29
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On Thu, 8 Sep 2005 14:13:53 +0100, in alt.home.repair gsjmia
wrote: FACE Wrote: Does anyone know a good way to get dried house paint out of the bristles of a synthetic house brush? The active ingredient in OOPS is Xylene, it cheaper to buy a quart at Home Depot, etc. than OOPS. It will dissolve latex paint and not harm the brush. Thanks. I am not familiar with OOPS. First thing i though of was Goof-off, but besides being over expensive relative to the brush, i figured it would melt the bristles. I will look into OOPS. FACE |
#30
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replying to George E. Cawthon, Marsha wrote:
I love to paint (not pictures) but have never heard of dipping brush in water while using. Please advise -- for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...les-28747-.htm |
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