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Ray August 14th 09 08:43 PM

Painting question? ? ?
 
Some years ago I painted the interior trim in my house -- baseboards,
windows, door facings etc. First with a coat of quality primer, then a
semi-gloss latex.

Question: If I use exactly the same semi-gloss paint, do I need to first use
a primer or some other dulling solution?


Oren[_2_] August 14th 09 09:59 PM

Painting question? ? ?
 
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 15:43:08 -0400, "Ray"
wrote:

Some years ago I painted the interior trim in my house -- baseboards,
windows, door facings etc. First with a coat of quality primer, then a
semi-gloss latex.

Question: If I use exactly the same semi-gloss paint, do I need to first use
a primer or some other dulling solution?


Not in my IMHO.

Use a 000 or 0000 steel wool pad to rub and freshen the surface.. Then
clean the trim with a painter tac cloth and then paint with your gloss
paint.

YMMV

SteveBell[_2_] August 14th 09 11:58 PM

Painting question? ? ?
 
Ray | 2009-08-14 | 2:43:08 PM wrote:

Some years ago I painted the interior trim in my house -- baseboards,
windows, door facings etc. First with a coat of quality primer, then
a semi-gloss latex.

Question: If I use exactly the same semi-gloss paint, do I need to
first use a primer or some other dulling solution?


I recommend that, as well as implementing Oren's suggestions, you clean
everything with TSP to remove oils and dirt that might keep the paint
from sticking. If you want to be thorough, you can use a liquid
deglosser.

--
Steve Bell
New Life Home Improvement
Arlington, TX USA

cm[_2_] August 15th 09 03:40 AM

Painting question? ? ?
 
We repaint a lot of interiors that were previously painted with latex. We
just wipe down the old base with a damp cloth to clean off the dust and then
paint with new latex. 25+ years, no call backs.

cm


"Ray" wrote in message
...
Some years ago I painted the interior trim in my house -- baseboards,
windows, door facings etc. First with a coat of quality primer, then a
semi-gloss latex.

Question: If I use exactly the same semi-gloss paint, do I need to first
use a primer or some other dulling solution?




cshenk August 15th 09 05:02 PM

Painting question? ? ?
 
"Ray" wrote

Some years ago I painted the interior trim in my house -- baseboards,
windows, door facings etc. First with a coat of quality primer, then a
semi-gloss latex.

Question: If I use exactly the same semi-gloss paint, do I need to first
use a primer or some other dulling solution?


You can safely just wash it down with rags, ruff just a bit with sand paper
(or steel wool of a fine grit) and repaint. You only have to be fancy if
putting latex over oil base.


David Nebenzahl August 16th 09 01:48 AM

Painting question? ? ?
 
On 8/15/2009 9:02 AM cshenk spake thus:

"Ray" wrote

Some years ago I painted the interior trim in my house -- baseboards,
windows, door facings etc. First with a coat of quality primer, then a
semi-gloss latex.

Question: If I use exactly the same semi-gloss paint, do I need to first
use a primer or some other dulling solution?


You can safely just wash it down with rags, ruff just a bit with sand paper
(or steel wool of a fine grit) and repaint. You only have to be fancy if
putting latex over oil base.


And even in that case it won't be a problem if the oil-based paint is
dead flat, either originally flat or de-glossed from years of
weathering. (I routinely apply latex paint over oil-based primer, flat.)


--
Found--the gene that causes belief in genetic determinism


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