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Ultraglide October 14th 07 04:15 PM

Priming and Painting
 
My mother just called me to say that she is painting her bathroom. She used
a latex primer. When she went back to check the job she noticed a bubble.
She picked at the bubble and some of the paint peeled off. My assumption is
that the previous paint was oil-based. Any suggestions as to how we can fix
things?



beecrofter[_2_] October 14th 07 05:31 PM

Priming and Painting
 
On Oct 14, 11:15 am, "Ultraglide"
wrote:
My mother just called me to say that she is painting her bathroom. She used
a latex primer. When she went back to check the job she noticed a bubble.
She picked at the bubble and some of the paint peeled off. My assumption is
that the previous paint was oil-based. Any suggestions as to how we can fix
things?


Itcould have been a greasy spot, in any case you should at least
break the gloss with solvent or sandpaper to get good adhesion.


ransley October 14th 07 06:32 PM

Priming and Painting
 
On Oct 14, 11:31 am, beecrofter wrote:
On Oct 14, 11:15 am, "Ultraglide"
wrote:

My mother just called me to say that she is painting her bathroom. She used
a latex primer. When she went back to check the job she noticed a bubble.
She picked at the bubble and some of the paint peeled off. My assumption is
that the previous paint was oil-based. Any suggestions as to how we can fix
things?


Itcould have been a greasy spot, in any case you should at least
break the gloss with solvent or sandpaper to get good adhesion.


dont pick at bubles or pimples they get infected


Norminn October 14th 07 09:06 PM

Priming and Painting
 
Ultraglide wrote:
My mother just called me to say that she is painting her bathroom. She used
a latex primer. When she went back to check the job she noticed a bubble.
She picked at the bubble and some of the paint peeled off. My assumption is
that the previous paint was oil-based. Any suggestions as to how we can fix
things?


Glossy old finish? Washed well before painting? Possibly she used a
fan or heater to dry the paint, or bright sun was on the area causing it
to dry too fast? Blistering is commonly from either suface drying too
fast and solvent trapped under the film, or surface was damp and water
caused the blister. You can pierce blisters and often they will flatten
out and not be a problem. Latex on top of a properly cleaned and dry
alkyd should not be a problem.

Ultraglide October 14th 07 11:33 PM

Priming and Painting
 
I just found out that she had wallpaper on the wall so I bought some
stripper to take the paint off. Hopefully both the primer and the previous
paint will come off.
"Norminn" wrote in message
...
Ultraglide wrote:
My mother just called me to say that she is painting her bathroom. She
used a latex primer. When she went back to check the job she noticed a
bubble. She picked at the bubble and some of the paint peeled off. My
assumption is that the previous paint was oil-based. Any suggestions as
to how we can fix things?

Glossy old finish? Washed well before painting? Possibly she used a fan
or heater to dry the paint, or bright sun was on the area causing it to
dry too fast? Blistering is commonly from either suface drying too fast
and solvent trapped under the film, or surface was damp and water caused
the blister. You can pierce blisters and often they will flatten out and
not be a problem. Latex on top of a properly cleaned and dry alkyd should
not be a problem.




Norminn October 15th 07 12:26 AM

Priming and Painting
 
Ultraglide wrote:

I just found out that she had wallpaper on the wall so I bought some
stripper to take the paint off. Hopefully both the primer and the previous
paint will come off.


Good grief! Don't use paint remover! There are loads of posts on this
newsgroup about removing wallpaper. Just pull off the paper. If you
try to use paint remover, you will have a goshawful mess.

Unless there are many blisters, or the paint is peeling, you may not
have to do anything. If it looks good and stays on, leave it.

You can generally remove paper quite easily and google will give you
lots of hits. Messy but not difficult.

"Norminn" wrote in message
...

Ultraglide wrote:

My mother just called me to say that she is painting her bathroom. She
used a latex primer. When she went back to check the job she noticed a
bubble. She picked at the bubble and some of the paint peeled off. My
assumption is that the previous paint was oil-based. Any suggestions as
to how we can fix things?


Glossy old finish? Washed well before painting? Possibly she used a fan
or heater to dry the paint, or bright sun was on the area causing it to
dry too fast? Blistering is commonly from either suface drying too fast
and solvent trapped under the film, or surface was damp and water caused
the blister. You can pierce blisters and often they will flatten out and
not be a problem. Latex on top of a properly cleaned and dry alkyd should
not be a problem.





Ultraglide October 15th 07 01:47 AM

Priming and Painting
 
No, I mean that there was paper on the wall that was removed. There must be
some glue residue on the wall which caused all the trouble.
"Norminn" wrote in message
...
Ultraglide wrote:

I just found out that she had wallpaper on the wall so I bought some
stripper to take the paint off. Hopefully both the primer and the
previous paint will come off.


Good grief! Don't use paint remover! There are loads of posts on this
newsgroup about removing wallpaper. Just pull off the paper. If you try
to use paint remover, you will have a goshawful mess.

Unless there are many blisters, or the paint is peeling, you may not have
to do anything. If it looks good and stays on, leave it.

You can generally remove paper quite easily and google will give you lots
of hits. Messy but not difficult.

"Norminn" wrote in message
...

Ultraglide wrote:

My mother just called me to say that she is painting her bathroom. She
used a latex primer. When she went back to check the job she noticed a
bubble. She picked at the bubble and some of the paint peeled off. My
assumption is that the previous paint was oil-based. Any suggestions as
to how we can fix things?

Glossy old finish? Washed well before painting? Possibly she used a fan
or heater to dry the paint, or bright sun was on the area causing it to
dry too fast? Blistering is commonly from either suface drying too fast
and solvent trapped under the film, or surface was damp and water caused
the blister. You can pierce blisters and often they will flatten out and
not be a problem. Latex on top of a properly cleaned and dry alkyd
should not be a problem.





Lou October 15th 07 03:39 AM

Priming and Painting
 
I'm curious, does anyone in the house smoke?
Lou



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