Re-Painting Wood Floors
14 years ago
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Comments (7)
- 14 years ago
- 14 years agolast modified: 10 years ago
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Quick ?s re exterior wood painting
Comments (3)That's what I was hoping! Think I'll use SW exterior oil wood primer and the duration line of exterior acrylic. It looks like the primer, though labeled as wood primer, can be used on primed metal - so I can use the rest of the quart when I repaint front and back door. At least according to the tech sheet. Thanks, christophern!...See MoreRe-painting wood doors
Comments (1)Are you painting all the trim too? I would go white. Those yellowish white walls don't really go with that gray flooring anyways and should probably be painted....See MoreGrout Painting/Sealing - re-painting over old paint
Comments (5)The 'guy' just wants the work and has little understanding/willingness to do what needs to be done. ANY finish (regardless of what it is) that is failing (peeling, etc) can and will cause the next layer to fail. It is simply the way of the world. Whenever you go over top of something, you are relying on the bottom layer's adhesion. Your 'bottom' layer is letting go (poor adhesion to no adhesion). You would then rely on this 'poor' adhesion to hold ANOTHER layer in place for 10 years or more. And that is simply unrealistic. The world of physics doesn't work that way. Once the bottom layer lets go, it will cause every layer ABOVE that to let go as well. I would plan on using whomsoever suggests removal and then repainting/sealing. The 'guy' who says he'll go over top of old/failing product is not worth the return phone call. His plan/finish WILL FAIL. We can guarantee it. Because the world of physics tells us it will fail....See MoreHow to re-finish or stain wood floor to match new tile?
Comments (4)The wood-look tile has a specific "brindle" (stripe) look to it. That is rare in wood flooring. You can find it in Ash and Hickory and some lower grade Maple. The stripe is something that is there or it isn't. Your stairs do NOT have it. The pattern/look will NEVER come. Ever. Now to the COLOUR. The gray is going to be SERIOUSLY difficult to do on red oak stairs. Super-duper difficult. As in, "Tear your hair out...wailing...." type of difficult. Which leaves the PALE skin/flesh tones. That's MUCH easier for red oak. When red oak is sanded down (ahem...palm sander on stairs = not a lot of fun = plenty of $$$ to a pro) it turns this pale flesh tone. Or very close to it. This colour can be preserved by using a high-end water based finish like Bona Traffic HD (satin would go well with your tile gloss level). What will that look like with a CHUNK of flesh toned stairs in the MIDDLE of a zebra striped floor? It will look ... how to say it, how to say it ... gawd awful. The fix for a skin toned stair in the middle of a zebra forest? Stair runner in a gray/cream colouring. Sigh. So...the REAL fix would be: Find a stair runner that works with your tile. Have the carpeting company come in and do the measurements and suggest the WIDTH of the runner on the treads. Find out how much of the tread will be visible on either side of the runner. Now you bring in a flooring person to strip the OUTER EDGES of the stair and finish them (yep...leaving the old finish in place....it will save ++$$$). Have the carpet runner installed and off you go. But to be honest with you, I would recommend another tile. The sample you are holding has 3 repeats in it that I can see. That means there will be HORDES of repeats throughout your floor. And the striping will be the Elephant in the room. You will see nothing else but the stripe. It will be busy, busy, busy. And then, it will be busy. Right after that...busy. You might want to ask yourself what it is about the tile COLOUR or PATTERN that attracts you. If you can narrow it down, you might be able to find a solution that isn't quite so....busy. And that option might be easier for your stairs to match....See MoreRelated Professionals
Melbourne Flooring Contractors · Merriam Flooring Contractors · Monroe Flooring Contractors · Montgomery County Flooring Contractors · Mountain Top Flooring Contractors · Norwalk Flooring Contractors · Snellville Flooring Contractors · Mill Valley Tile and Stone Contractors · Newington Carpet Dealers · Arlington General Contractors · Halfway General Contractors · Lewisburg General Contractors · Orangevale General Contractors · Port Washington General Contractors · Winfield General Contractors- 14 years agolast modified: 10 years ago
- 14 years agolast modified: 10 years ago
- 14 years agolast modified: 10 years ago
- 14 years agolast modified: 10 years ago
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