Monday, February 8, 2010

How can I keep tobacco smoke residue on walls from bleeding through new paint?

I bought an old farmhouse that has suffered significant neglect and abuse. While other repairs have been costly, like re-plumbing the entire house they are for the most part invisible. I have been having problems with repainting the interior. I am trying to repaint the interior and have problems with yellowing of the paint as it dries. I wash and repair the walls before I paint, but when I do the color does not come out as expected. I have applied 3 coats of brilliant white paint to the dining room and it comes out yellowish brown and splotchy. How can I prevent the paint from turning yellow as it dries? I know the other rooms are going to have the same problem. Also how can I paint over paneling, that apparently was greyish but is now dark brown?How can I keep tobacco smoke residue on walls from bleeding through new paint?
Since you have already scrubbed the surface, use Kilz primer/sealer. You can also have it tinted close to the new color to save doing multiple coats.How can I keep tobacco smoke residue on walls from bleeding through new paint?
First of all you have to scrub the walls using water and TSP (tri-sodium phosphate). Then head to the paint/hardware store and ask for a product called Killz primer (I think that's the right name). If they don't have that product they should have a similar product. The primer prevents anything from bleeding through. Then paint using a good quality paint.
First, anything you paint over you will have to clean first, otherwise the paint won't stick. YOu can use TSP (avail at Home Depot or Lowes) or Fantastik. Then to cover stains, try ';Kils'; primer. It works great.
Use a good primer prior to painting-- Kilz is the brand I use
dont know what country your in but in England we have something called 'stain-block' that you just slosh on before applying the new paint.





its normally used for covering stains caused by damp, but works pretty well on most things
use kiltz first then paint
theres a product called kilz that is made just exactly for the problem you described, you paint a coat of that first and it stops any bleedthrough.
If you use kiltz in the paint it won't bleed.
There is a commercial grade cover up called Kiltz





I used it and it prevented smoke from coming through.


Good luck!
you may have to use a different color of paint, stark white is not what is hot right now anyways, the new colors are a light chocolate brown, sage green, or even deep yellows and like tones try to shake things up a bit. You will be surprised how much of a difference color makes. Choose the right accessories (pier 1, Ikea) and you will have a beautiful home in no time. Good luck! Have fun with it.

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