Home  Product and Services Guide  Stories, articles, and how-to's  Old-House-Friends Forums
"Painting Historic Interiors" an Historic Preservation Brief January 9, 2009


How to clean rain lamp...
Member Sign In|Company Sign In





Painting Historic Interiors

Sara B. Chase
Painting Historic Interiors

What's in this article



less detail


Introduction

Constituents of Historic Paint

        Pigment

        Binder

        Vehicle

Oil-Based and Water-Based Paints

        Recent Changes to Paint Constituents

Types of Historic Paints

        Oil-based paints

              Enamels

              Glaze

        Water-based paints

              Whitewash

              Distemper

              Calcimine, or kalsomine

              Tempera

              Gouache

        Milk-based paint

              Casein

Pre-1875 Paints

        Production and Appearance

        Geographical Variation

        Brush Marks

        Color

        Glossy/Flat

        Decorative Painting

        Graining and marbleizing

        Trompe L'oeil

Factory-Made Paints after 1875

20th Century Paints

Paint Investigation

Choosing a Treatment

        Preservation

        Rehabilitation

        Restoration

Identifying Deteriorated and Damaged Paint Surfaces

        Abrasion

        Dirt

        Water

        Age/Sunlight

        Incompatible Paints

Surface Preparation

        Scraping and Sanding

        Paint Removal

              Heat/Scraping

              Chemical stripping

              Detergent or vinegar and water

              Air pressure

        Patching and Repair

        Priming

Choosing Modern Paint Types/Finish Coats

        Oil-based/alkyd paints

        Acrylic waterborne paints (latex)

        Calcimine/whitewash

        Glazes

        Epoxies/Urethane

Applying Interior Paints

        Brushes

        Rollers

Types of Modern Paint

        Oilbased/alkyd

        Acrylic waterborne paints (latex)

        Enamels

        Metal finishes

        Special finishes

Summary

Caution

Selected Reading

Organizations

Acknowledgements


Return to the Knowledge Base

 << Previous Page 
Viewing Page 14 of 18
Next Page >> 

Air pressure. Air pressure of 200-500 psi is effective for flat surfaces if there is a weak substrate surface bond. A flat nozzle is inserted between the paint layer and substrate, and the air pressure simply lifts the loose paint up for easy removal. When used carefully, this method is fast and causes little damage.

Patching and Repair. Once the substrate and its surface are sound and clean, free from crumbling, loose material or dust, the next step is to undercut and fill any cracks in plaster surfaces. Plaster which has lost its key and is sagging should be reattached or replaced. Friable plaster and punky wood need to be consolidated. Wood surfaces should be made as smooth as they were historically so that the paint film will cover a relatively uniform surface. Rotted wood must be removed and new wood carefully spliced in. Finally, gypsum plaster finishes can be painted as soon as the water has evaporated; a lime putty coat or traditional finish plaster can be primed almost immediately after drying as well, using alkaliresistant primers such as acrylic latex.

Priming. The importance of a primer can hardly be overstated. It is the intermediary material between the immediate substrate, which may be an old paint layer or may be bare wood, plaster, or metal (rarely stone, as around a fireplace opening), and the fresh paint itself. The primer must be capable of being absorbed to some extent by the material underneath while being compatible and cohesive with the paint to be applied on top. Most paint manufacturers will provide explicit instructions about which primers are most compatible with their paints. Those instructions should be followed.

The question of a primer for latex paint continues to be debated. Traditionalists recommend that the primer between an old oil paint and a new latex paint be an oil primer, but the improvements to latex paint in recent years have led many experts to the conclusion that today's top grade latex primers are best for latex finish paints. If a latex primer is selected, the label on the can should specify clearly that it is one which can bond to an older oil or oil/alkyd paint.

The most important general rule to remember is that softer or weaker paints should always go over harder and stronger paints. For instance, because latex is stronger than oil, an oil or oil/alkyd paint can go over a well adhered latex, but the reverse will run the risk of failure. Using primer and finish paints by a single company is a good way to guarantee compatibility.


 << Previous Page 
Viewing Page 14 of 18
Next Page >> 



  Ads by Google

  Members:  Sign In  |  Register  |  Benefits  |  Feedback  |  Tell-a-Friend  |  Help
  Companies:  Sign In  |  Account Manager  |  Promote Your Company  |  Register  |  Help Advertise

Copyright ©2009 by Renovators, a TB Systems company. All rights reserved. Privacy policy.