@@justinbrown5820 yeah there great cause you can use harsh cleaning agents on them i know these the acrylic scrub paints but they still aint as durable as oil eggshell and oil is cheaper and covers better and saves on a lot on prep work and spending more money on expensive stain blockers plus it's waterproof no more stained walls
Not sure if anyone's going to read this but I'm painting a house that was trashed and I had to spot prime with oil killz in many spots and the owner wants an eggshell finish what do I use to prime over the oil spots before finish coating?
What if your latex paint has primer in it? Do you still need to prime? Also, I really just have a small area that is oil from when I thought doing a mural was a good idea and I had run out of the one colour in acrylic. I saw another video where someone just used wall putty over the oil instead. Would that make more sense in my case? I also got a bottle of paint stripper, but I don't know which is the best option for me.
oil primer as well then paint, the putty will not stick to the oil paint and will crack and fall off, and the paint in primer paint, it is not a true primer in it, and behr says prime while you paint,it is false advertisement,
Use a 100% acrylic like Fresh Start to bind to oil. Then apply latex top coat. Use BIN ir Killz after that for any tannins or stains/ bleed through after. Without a respirator or being under air you’ll kill a lot of brain cells using that much BIN or Killz product. Hope this helps.
quick test to tell if you have oil paint or a water born paint..take finger nail polish remover.on a rag, and wipe it on the wall.if any color comes off then its a water born,if no color at all then its an oil paint
Not at all what I meant when i said, "how to paint a room on canvas with oil paints". How do I even word it to NOT get results where someone is painting an actual room???
@Spoiled Ramen if you have an oil paint or a varnish, use a good oil primer,like cover stain, do not use a laytex or any water borne over it, and def do not use 123 primer, it will let go over time ,
Yeah! Just not latex over oil! Unless you're priming exterior with oil then a latex will cover. Interior is fine- you just have to prime with a 100% acrylic if you want to convert back to latex- which is the future- lower volatile organic compounds and a massive palette of growing colours as oil is slowly phased out.
You can't really... Unless the paint has peeled ( latex was applied directly over the oil and wasn't primed) or the painters didn't do their job and you can see the colour underneath the coat- if it's a different colour than both the original colour and the new colour ( primer is usually white unless it's tinted) then you can probably bet it was primed. Also if it had a flat sheen, you can bet it's primed✔️
This was very informative man, loving the overlay text as well!!
Did a good job.
Good vid. You remind me of Timothy B. Schmidt.
how can i check to see if primer was used before paint was put on
Which would produce the better result? Oil primer or the Acrylic?
i still do use oil paints on walls and sometimes ceilings in oil based eggshell or flat oil last so much longer
True- there’s still some great uses for oil products- specifically for old plaster or priming applications.
@@justinbrown5820 yeah there great cause you can use harsh cleaning agents on them i know these the acrylic scrub paints but they still aint as durable as oil eggshell and oil is cheaper and covers better and saves on a lot on prep work and spending more money on expensive stain blockers plus it's waterproof no more stained walls
Not sure if anyone's going to read this but I'm painting a house that was trashed and I had to spot prime with oil killz in many spots and the owner wants an eggshell finish what do I use to prime over the oil spots before finish coating?
Sir my wall have water paint I am put primer and after put oil paint
What if your latex paint has primer in it? Do you still need to prime? Also, I really just have a small area that is oil from when I thought doing a mural was a good idea and I had run out of the one colour in acrylic. I saw another video where someone just used wall putty over the oil instead. Would that make more sense in my case? I also got a bottle of paint stripper, but I don't know which is the best option for me.
oil primer as well then paint, the putty will not stick to the oil paint and will crack and fall off, and the paint in primer paint, it is not a true primer in it, and behr says prime while you paint,it is false advertisement,
How much does it take to dry???
Can i also prime before using an oil paint on a wall
ericson ganyoson yes you can!
Some are saying you need to use oil base primer over oil base paint I'm gussing it doesn't matter?
it does matter, you have to oil prime over anything oil, and bin, 123 or other bonding primers are not oil, and will let go..
Are u saying that to cover oil paint r u apply fresh start?? Or should I apply kilz...bin...and then apply latex paint?
Use a 100% acrylic like Fresh Start to
bind to oil. Then apply latex top coat. Use BIN ir Killz after that for any tannins or stains/ bleed through after. Without a respirator or being under air you’ll kill a lot of brain cells using that much BIN or Killz product. Hope this helps.
Right you are, just one thing, how do you get paint out of your beard? eh eh eh
He still removing paint from his beard🙄
How can I know if my wall paint is oil or acrylic 😕😫
quick test to tell if you have oil paint or a water born paint..take finger nail polish remover.on a rag, and wipe it on the wall.if any color comes off then its a water born,if no color at all then its an oil paint
Not at all what I meant when i said, "how to paint a room on canvas with oil paints". How do I even word it to NOT get results where someone is painting an actual room???
Good video. But in the beginning, there is more talking than the demonstration. Thanks for posting...
never use a water base primer on top of oil paint it will let go..
@Spoiled Ramen if you have an oil paint or a varnish, use a good oil primer,like cover stain, do not use a laytex or any water borne over it, and def do not use 123 primer, it will let go over time ,
Can I put oil over latex ?
Yeah! Just not latex over oil! Unless you're priming exterior with oil then a latex will cover. Interior is fine- you just have to prime with a 100% acrylic if you want to convert back to latex- which is the future- lower volatile organic compounds and a massive palette of growing colours as oil is slowly phased out.
if they painted an oil paint, you can not put a 100%acrylic over the oil pant to convert back, you have to use an oil primer over the oil paint..
@@wolf360090 and then than apply kilz or bin (oil primer)...can I paint with latex or should I apply latex primer??
@@pablohu6935 not kiltz or bin they are not oil,, use cover stain made by the same company, then you can put laytex over it
how can i check to see if primer was used before paint was put on
You can't really... Unless the paint has peeled ( latex was applied directly over the oil and wasn't primed) or the painters didn't do their job and you can see the colour underneath the coat- if it's a different colour than both the original colour and the new colour ( primer is usually white unless it's tinted) then you can probably bet it was primed. Also if it had a flat sheen, you can bet it's primed✔️