I've been painting some dark stained panelled wood doors white. They were finished very smoothly, maybe french polished.
Here was my method: Thorough sand in circular motion and wipe down with a damp cloth.
Apply one coat of B&Q "primer and undercoat".
Apply several coats of B&Q pure brilliant white gloss.
I have had to use about 4 coats of gloss on these doors before the finish is acceptable. And even now in bright light, the doors are streaky.
It strikes me that the main issue with painting is brush strokes. If there were no brush strokes, the colour underneath wouldnt be visible. Would rollering be better? Using a fine foam roller? What I'd like is some kind of spray paint, whereby I could take the remaining doors outside and spray them, thus removing all kinds of friction application! The finish would be much easier for an amateur!
I have 8 more door sides to do (I've done 4) on identical doors to these, but cant face the monotomy of all this 8 more times!
Here was my method: Thorough sand in circular motion and wipe down with a damp cloth.
Apply one coat of B&Q "primer and undercoat".
Apply several coats of B&Q pure brilliant white gloss.
I have had to use about 4 coats of gloss on these doors before the finish is acceptable. And even now in bright light, the doors are streaky.
It strikes me that the main issue with painting is brush strokes. If there were no brush strokes, the colour underneath wouldnt be visible. Would rollering be better? Using a fine foam roller? What I'd like is some kind of spray paint, whereby I could take the remaining doors outside and spray them, thus removing all kinds of friction application! The finish would be much easier for an amateur!
I have 8 more door sides to do (I've done 4) on identical doors to these, but cant face the monotomy of all this 8 more times!