All,
I have a few spills on my hardwood floors from painting various items
around the house. The spills are oil based primer and oil based paint.
I know it's very easy to remove the stuff when it's fresh by using
mineral spirits as it comes right up, but what about after it has
dried/cured?
Am I out of luck ? Will mineral spirits still be effective, if not,
what are the proper steps to take.
For the sharp tongued:
Yes I tried to protect the floors, I had plastic sheeting covering the
whole area but between two crazy pets and three wild kids, the plastic
moved in some areas and the floor became exposed.
Thanks in advance guys.
Mineral spirits will not touch dried paint. More likely to strip finish
off hardwood floor, if it is only wax. Paint stripper will give the
same result, only worse.
What is the finish on the floor, if it is known?
How big are the spots?
If small, I would get a box of single edge razor blades and a pair of
knee pads and start scraping, very carefully, at the spots, going just
far enough to remove the paint. You may still have to wax or repair
the floor finish where the spots were.
Good luck...
The floor is stained (cherry type finish) with polyurethane on top. I
have a mixture of spills and drips.
So far, this doesn't look good. I didn't know it would be this
difficult to get the paint up. If the finish is stripped I don't
care... I'd rather look at that instead of white paint. I guess
sanding is the only option ?
You might try soaking the dried spills with some linseed oil until the
spills soften and then scraping off.
Good Luck.
"edog" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> All,
>
> I have a few spills on my hardwood floors from painting various items
> around the house. The spills are oil based primer and oil based paint.
> I know it's very easy to remove the stuff when it's fresh by using
> mineral spirits as it comes right up, but what about after it has
> dried/cured?
>
> Am I out of luck ? Will mineral spirits still be effective, if not,
> what are the proper steps to take.
>
> For the sharp tongued:
>
> Yes I tried to protect the floors, I had plastic sheeting covering the
> whole area but between two crazy pets and three wild kids, the plastic
> moved in some areas and the floor became exposed.
> Thanks in advance guys.
>
edog wrote:
> All,
>
> I have a few spills on my hardwood floors from painting various items
> around the house. The spills are oil based primer and oil based paint.
> I know it's very easy to remove the stuff when it's fresh by using
> mineral spirits as it comes right up, but what about after it has
> dried/cured?
>
> Am I out of luck ? Will mineral spirits still be effective, if not,
> what are the proper steps to take.
>
> For the sharp tongued:
>
> Yes I tried to protect the floors, I had plastic sheeting covering the
> whole area but between two crazy pets and three wild kids, the plastic
> moved in some areas and the floor became exposed.
> Thanks in advance guys.
Spills or drips? For drips use a single edged razor blade as a mini
scraper and a lot of care.
--
Jack Novak
Buffalo, NY - USA
(Remove "SPAM" from email address to reply)
I've used the stuff show in the link for a variety of small paint
removal projects on delicate items.
http://www.hobbylinc.com/htm/flo/flof552144.htm
DAVID
edog wrote:
> All,
>
> I have a few spills on my hardwood floors from painting various items
> around the house. The spills are oil based primer and oil based paint.
> I know it's very easy to remove the stuff when it's fresh by using
> mineral spirits as it comes right up, but what about after it has
> dried/cured?
>
> Am I out of luck ? Will mineral spirits still be effective, if not,
> what are the proper steps to take.
>
> For the sharp tongued:
>
> Yes I tried to protect the floors, I had plastic sheeting covering the
> whole area but between two crazy pets and three wild kids, the plastic
> moved in some areas and the floor became exposed.
> Thanks in advance guys.
>
"edog" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> The floor is stained (cherry type finish) with polyurethane on top. I
> have a mixture of spills and drips.
>
> So far, this doesn't look good. I didn't know it would be this
> difficult to get the paint up. If the finish is stripped I don't
> care... I'd rather look at that instead of white paint. I guess
> sanding is the only option ?
>
Have you tried a product like Valspar's Goof-Off? I know it works for latex
paint, but I have not tried it on oil. They sell small cans in various chain
and hardware stores.
Try in a very inconspicuous area first.
I might also try a heat gun on a low setting. The drips may peel off of the
poly if the paint has not bonded with it.
'Sharpen' a stiff putty knife on your grinder or with a file then round the
corners to prevent gouging the floor. Scrape slowly and carefully..
--
Too much is not enough!
Ray
rvojtash NOT THIS ATcomcast DOT net
"edog" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> All,
>
> I have a few spills on my hardwood floors from painting various items
> around the house. The spills are oil based primer and oil based paint.
> I know it's very easy to remove the stuff when it's fresh by using
> mineral spirits as it comes right up, but what about after it has
> dried/cured?
>
> Am I out of luck ? Will mineral spirits still be effective, if not,
> what are the proper steps to take.
>
> For the sharp tongued:
>
> Yes I tried to protect the floors, I had plastic sheeting covering the
> whole area but between two crazy pets and three wild kids, the plastic
> moved in some areas and the floor became exposed.
> Thanks in advance guys.
>
Try removing as much as you can by scraping as mentioned above, then get a
very fine steel wool and gently "sand" off the remaining.
Steve
"edog" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> All,
>
> I have a few spills on my hardwood floors from painting various items
> around the house. The spills are oil based primer and oil based paint.
> I know it's very easy to remove the stuff when it's fresh by using
> mineral spirits as it comes right up, but what about after it has
> dried/cured?
>
> Am I out of luck ? Will mineral spirits still be effective, if not,
> what are the proper steps to take.
>
> For the sharp tongued:
>
> Yes I tried to protect the floors, I had plastic sheeting covering the
> whole area but between two crazy pets and three wild kids, the plastic
> moved in some areas and the floor became exposed.
> Thanks in advance guys.
>