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I used to save tablespoons of stuff but then they thicken. I have lately been going around throwing out anything left less than 1/2 cup.Someone stained the bedroom floor upstairs very dark brown, almost black. It shows every speck of dust.I thought about refinishing it years ago, but removing old stain would almost require a professional sander. Maybe it was "to hide a nasty stain that's lying there" (♪♫♪), somewhere. Why else would they do that?
The threshold into the closet was covered with green and white paint. I removed the paint and planned on leaving the threshold natural, but it looks like someone left the light on in the closet and it's shining under the door. Found an old can of Minwax stain at my parents' place. Dark walnut. It's a perfect match.How lucky is that?
It's not the cost of new, it's the shopping, trying to find a match, and then getting something that you use a tablespoon of and hate to throw the rest away.
Don.... how do you start an earthquake?In the 2018 earthquake here, my wife's car was in the garage. The paint cans we had stored on shelves all came cascading down and opened over her car. Quite a mess, and we store paint much lower now, and only usable quantities
Move to someplace that has them. I guess I don't understand....Don.... how do you start an earthquake?![]()
My apologies, Don. I was thinking of an old Insurance joke. Here is a PC version:Move to someplace that has them. I guess I don't understand....
In the 2018 earthquake here, my wife's car was in the garage. The paint cans we had stored on shelves all came cascading down and opened over her car. Quite a mess, and we store paint much lower now, and only usable quantities
How timely. Just last night I brought 3/4 gallon of Minwax and 1/2 gallon of cheap generic brand oil-based polyurethane back from near death. Both had thick gel-like substance in the bottom. Patient stirring and lots of paint thinner did the trick on the Minwax. The other had formed a coating over the top. Don't think it's safe to use on anything important. I need to transfer into smaller containers. Didn't they used to sell containers just for that purpose.Extend the Life of Old Paint | Brad the Painter
https://www.bradthepainter.com/extend-the-life-of-old-paint/
A reader has a method he says greatly increases the lifespan of a can of paint.
“Long ago I learned a technique to make paint last almost indefinitely–in quantities of 1 gallon of less (though it might be possible with current plastic 5-gallon buckets). Making very sure that the cans are tightly sealed, turn them over every year or two. Today I’m painting with a long since discontinued Flecto plasticized Varathane enamel. I first opened and used it 11 years ago, but had always flipped it every year or two. It does take about 3-4 days to dry, but I’m betting it was slow even back in the day. This is the third “opening,” and it’s behaved the same each time.”
https://www.bradthepainter.com/extend-the-life-of-old-paint/
That's nothing. I was inclined to say, To get to the other side. But then, I have chickens.Move to someplace that has them. I guess I don't understand....
Someone stained the bedroom floor upstairs very dark brown, almost black. It shows every speck of dust. ...
The threshold into the closet was covered with green and white paint. I removed the paint and planned on leaving the threshold natural, but it looks like someone left the light on in the closet and it's shining under the door. Found an old can of Minwax stain at my parents' place. Dark walnut. It's a perfect match.How lucky is that?
I must admit that I have painted certain walls without primer. If it is an expensive paint, it worked with one coat. If not the first coat was the primer.I'm bad about not mixing paint also. Especially if it's a 2nd or 3rd coat. I just mixed it yesterday.
This string of fixing little things, that have been lingering for years, has been therapeutic. It's a bargain I made as a way to justify procrastinating on the bathroom sink. I can't get a pattern painted on that sink that I like. I keep walking by it and changing something. It scares me to try the resin coating. I often see the same comment about paralysis in moving forward on YouTube how to videos about epoxy resin coating. I think it's the time factor. You have to finish each coat in 10 minutes.
Almost every tool I own, ladders, step stools, sawhorses, and numerous cans of paint and supplies are now handy in the two rooms adjoining the bathroom. The miter saw is on the porch. Makes it easy to do other little projects. Not far to search. But the clutter is starting to get on my nerves. Just one more little project I'd like to finish first. Then it's crunch time.![]()
I always use primer on sheetrock and mud that hasn't been painted, and on any knotty softwood products. Sometimes it helps if you are covering a color (or wall paper you don't want to strip) that is difficult to cover. You can do a half-tint primer (one half of the color in the finish coat) to help cover the difficult stuff, especially if the primer is significantly cheaper than the finish coat. It might save you a coat of finish.I rarely use primer. Except on drywall and water marks on ceiling from roof leaks. Lived to regret it one time---new woodwork in the kitchen. Knots in the wood bled through 2 coats of white paint. That's another job I just did. Covered those knots with Zinsser white primer, after the fact. Feathered it in. Can't tell the difference.