Painting and Finishing - Page 20 of 40
At its most fundamental level, painting hasn’t changed much in the last century. The painter uses a simple tool — basically a stick with some animal hair attached to one end — to spread a liquid finish over the target surface. That’s still true for many homeowners who do their own painting. Pros, however, may use spray equipment instead of a brush, and the paints and stains available today are sophisticated blends of waterborne pigments and binders rather than lead-based formulations. In other words, painting is deceptively simple: It sort of looks like what Gramps might have done, except it isn’t.
However you tackle it, painting consists of a few well-defined steps: paint and equipment selection, surface prep, application, and cleanup. The basics should be fairly easy to master. If the surface is carefully prepped (paint really doesn’t hide much) and the paint is carefully applied, the result should be everything you expect.
Where Fine Homebuilding’s experienced pros can help is with what’s not so obvious. How, for example, do you refinish that once-beautiful, and expensive, entry door with hand-mixed stain and a new coat of varnish? How do you restore your hardwood floors so they glow again? Is spray equipment something that’s worth renting?
Painting, whether it’s indoors or out, is a powerful home decorating tool. Finishes also preserve and protect metal, wood, and other materials exposed to weather and sunlight. Not everyone is destined to become a world-class painter or finisher, and you may very well want to call a professional. But going beyond the basics is well worth the effort.
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Drywall Bucket Gets a New Handle
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Skillful Brushwork for Doors and Windows
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A Painter’s Tool Bucket
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Refinish Your Cabinets
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Paint a Room Series: Cleaning Brushes and Rollers
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Paint a Room Series: How to Cut In
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Paint a Room Series: Painting Interior Trim
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Paint a Room Series: Priming Walls for Paint
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Paint a Room Series: Masking for Interior Paint
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Paint a Room Series: Caulking Baseboard and Trim