Saturday, April 09, 2011
Painting exterior brick tips in Lake Forest is not necessarily a hard job if you live in a newer home. Say for example a ranch-style home that has a lot of shade trees. And all the windows are the newer types that don't need glazing.
The siding is brick, so all you have to paint is the trim, doors and windows and maybe the garage door. Well, maybe your house isn't one of these gravy jobs (as a house painter I do get my share of these).
Maybe it's a three-story, Victorian home with multi-colors and all the windows are old and need re-glazing. This is the other extreme to painting exterior.
When choosing exterior paint colors, use an exterior color brochure. These brochures have normal standardized colors that won't make your home look like a bad LSD trip. Use top-of-the-line, name brand paints and primers. No sense doing all that professional work and wasting your hard labor on cheap paint. Make sure that paint job will last as well as look its best. Make sure to use exterior latex paint not oil base or solvent-base paints. Latex coatings not only breathe they stay flexible and won't fade nearly as much in the direct sunlight. Also, oil base because it cannot breathe, cracks and peels as moisture tries to leave the walls.
Give your house a wash "one side at a time". Paint and trim out your windows first. Next do the siding, working your way down as you go. For painting exterior doors and trim you can do that as you move along. Save paint by using a speed roller as well as a paintbrush on the siding. Just using a brush to paint your siding uses up paint a lot faster.
These roller covers are very, very durable and make paint spread fast and far. If you run into exterior paint problems like old, cracked, oil base paint to remove I recommend using a hot air gun that is designed for removing oil base paint. Wagner Tools makes a hot air gun for this. Just remove what is loose and paint it up with fresh exterior latex paint. You can always go back and burn off more unsound oil base paint as it begins to crack and peel later on over the years. That's about it for now for painting exterior.


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