on โ02-09-2013 04:58 PM
I need some advice please. I have painted our study and when I painted the door surface the paint does not seem to be drying, All the other surfaces dried in about 30-40 minuted but it has now been several hours and it is still wet. I used acrylic flat paint and I don't know what the original paint surface on the door was.
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on โ02-09-2013 08:38 PM
Op...........it sounds to me like you have painted water based paint over oil based paint.
Rub the paint you are trying to cover with methylated spirit..............if it comes off then it is water based...............if not then it is oil based.
Maybe this site will be of help.
on โ02-09-2013 05:31 PM
Doors are typicaly painted in a gloss finish, if its an older door or done by an old school painter it will be a gloss enamel, as such the flat acrylic will not soak in like it did on the wall and will most likly peel off very quickly even when it dries which could take days in wet cold or humid conditions.
Flat acrylis is not a suitable paint for a door
on โ02-09-2013 06:11 PM
on โ02-09-2013 06:25 PM
Flat acrylis is not a suitable paint for a door
Why?
on โ02-09-2013 06:33 PM
on โ02-09-2013 06:44 PM
@joz*garage wrote:Flat acrylis is not a suitable paint for a door
Why?
Its simply not intended for heavy use areas, its a ceiling or bedroom wall paint
on โ02-09-2013 06:47 PM
it does makes sense to use something better for high traffic areas EM, perhaps a semi gloss acrylic paint which would make cleaning easier
โ02-09-2013 07:24 PM - edited โ02-09-2013 07:27 PM
@the_hawk* wrote:
@joz*garage wrote:Flat acrylis is not a suitable paint for a door
Why?
Its simply not intended for heavy use areas, its a ceiling or bedroom wall paint
yeah but if the OP wants to use flat paints that is at hand (i do), thats OK, as long as some surfaces are primed & prepared
on โ02-09-2013 07:29 PM
@joz*garage wrote:
@the_hawk* wrote:
@joz*garage wrote:Flat acrylis is not a suitable paint for a door
Why?
Its simply not intended for heavy use areas, its a ceiling or bedroom wall paint
yeah but if the OP wants to use flat paints that is at hand (i do), thats OK, as long as some surfaces are primed & prepared
Yes you could use what you want, just dont be suprised when you dont get the results you want when you use the wrong products
on โ02-09-2013 08:23 PM
yeah whatever, so the OP has a couple of choices, she might also have a tin of undercoat laying around