I've been wanting to do a garage dio with painted weathered walls. I know that mixing two different types of paint, one over the other, can result is cracks and peeling, but I don't remember what the types were.
I'm sure I can search it on the internet, but I was wondering if anyone here has tried this already and if so, what did you use and how did it turn out? And do you have any pictures of the product?
Thanks in advance for any assistance.
Cracked Paint? How to do...
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- paraclete1
- Posts: 194
- Joined: Thu Sep 09, 2004 8:44 am
- Location: Siloam Springs Ark
Cracked Paint? How to do...
Don "Let me buy just one more, then I'll quit... I promise!" Pugh
- paraclete1
- Posts: 194
- Joined: Thu Sep 09, 2004 8:44 am
- Location: Siloam Springs Ark
- paraclete1
- Posts: 194
- Joined: Thu Sep 09, 2004 8:44 am
- Location: Siloam Springs Ark
Quick and dirty description about paints.
An enamel is a paint that cures from a chemical reaction allowing the tints in the paint to reach their final color. A lacquer is a paint that dries from the evaporation of the carrier. Because an enamel cures, it can be "stretchy." A lacquer becomes a monolithic layer and can actually contract somewhat as the carrier evaporates. Often (but not always) an acrylic paint is a lacquer, and enamels are petroleum based (like Testor's Model Master and Humbrols).
So most of the time, I've not wanted interactions between paint layers, so the conventional wisdom is to allow paint to thoroughly cure before applying the next layer, e.g. waiting between main paint finish and the application of weathering. IIRC, this meant waiting at least 3 days for a lacquer (usually an acrylic) and 5 days for an enamel (e.g. Model Master).
Usually, not following these rules causes cracking.
An enamel is a paint that cures from a chemical reaction allowing the tints in the paint to reach their final color. A lacquer is a paint that dries from the evaporation of the carrier. Because an enamel cures, it can be "stretchy." A lacquer becomes a monolithic layer and can actually contract somewhat as the carrier evaporates. Often (but not always) an acrylic paint is a lacquer, and enamels are petroleum based (like Testor's Model Master and Humbrols).
So most of the time, I've not wanted interactions between paint layers, so the conventional wisdom is to allow paint to thoroughly cure before applying the next layer, e.g. waiting between main paint finish and the application of weathering. IIRC, this meant waiting at least 3 days for a lacquer (usually an acrylic) and 5 days for an enamel (e.g. Model Master).
Usually, not following these rules causes cracking.