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new england gal January 11th 05 01:31 AM

Painting House Trim
 
I will need to paint the house trim this year and since we just bought
this house I'm not sure what type oil or latex was used. Is there
anyway to tell? I can't ask the previous owner. I can never remember
which can't go over which.
Thanks in advance. You all are so helpful!


[email protected] January 11th 05 01:35 AM

get off yor lazy ass, look it up,
and educate yourself,
or get a paint chip and put it on some crackers


Bonnie Jean January 11th 05 01:39 AM

I'd like to know also.

"new england gal" wrote in message
oups.com...
I will need to paint the house trim this year and since we just bought
this house I'm not sure what type oil or latex was used. Is there
anyway to tell? I can't ask the previous owner. I can never remember
which can't go over which.
Thanks in advance. You all are so helpful!



PVR January 11th 05 04:17 AM

Hi gal. If the current trim paint is oil and old a latex will not stick to
it. One way to check which is which is to get a chip off the trim and bend
it. Oil based (if old) will easily crack/break. A good latex will have some
flexibility/extensibility. ICI-Glidden has a product called "The Gripper."
This sticks to many things but you should ask the guys in the store if The
Gripper will adhere to old oil/alkyd. Gripper only comes in white so you may
need three coats; Gripper, color primer and color topcoat. The biggest job
is surface preparation before you paint. Again, ask the guys at the store.
Always use the best quality paints for outside paint jobs. In general you
get what you pay for.

BTW, terafferty is wrong and bad mannered. When you talk to the NGs you ARE
looking it up, it's the quickest way to go.

Best of luck.

Peter.

"new england gal" wrote in message
oups.com...
I will need to paint the house trim this year and since we just bought
this house I'm not sure what type oil or latex was used. Is there
anyway to tell? I can't ask the previous owner. I can never remember
which can't go over which.
Thanks in advance. You all are so helpful!




Ron January 11th 05 06:20 AM

Put some alcohol on a rag and rub the paint. Latex will come of, oil base
won't.
Ron

"new england gal" wrote in message
oups.com...
I will need to paint the house trim this year and since we just bought
this house I'm not sure what type oil or latex was used. Is there
anyway to tell? I can't ask the previous owner. I can never remember
which can't go over which.
Thanks in advance. You all are so helpful!




mg January 11th 05 04:42 PM

On 10 Jan 2005 17:35:26 -0800, wrote:

get off yor lazy ass, look it up,
and educate yourself,
or get a paint chip and put it on some crackers



What a rude response.
Time to set another Usenet filter.

PLONK
--

There are only 10 types of people in the world:
those that understand binary, and
those that don't.

new england gal January 11th 05 06:18 PM

Thanks to everyone. I really appreciate the help. I'll admit....I do
ask a LOT of questions though. I'll try to show some self-restraint.
Its just so nice to have such a wealth of info from people who know the
answers. The answers may seem simple to you and obvious but to new "do
it yourselfers" your knowledge is invaluable!
I hope you all know how much it is appreciated.


Camilo January 11th 05 06:29 PM

"new england gal" wrote in message
oups.com...
I will need to paint the house trim this year and since we just bought
this house I'm not sure what type oil or latex was used. Is there
anyway to tell? I can't ask the previous owner. I can never remember
which can't go over which.
Thanks in advance. You all are so helpful!


Check out this link about painting - I think it will answer many of your
questions.

http://www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/know...2675%2C00.html




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