TT

Tanus

27/08/2006 11:29 PM

Particle Board Painting

We found a dollhouse that had been tossed out in the trash and decided
to fix it. Mostly it was gluing up bad joints and repairing some small
wood pieces that had broken off from abuse.

The floor is hardboard which is holding up pretty well, but the walls
are all 3/8" particle board. They had been covered with wallpaper, which
SWMBO wanted removed and the board cleaned for painting. I"ve done most
of that, but I have a concern about painting the boards. I have a
feeling that it'll suck up as much paint as we can throw at it and still
look pretty splotchy.

Has anyone ever successfully painted particle board? I was thinking of
adding some sizing to it to fill it up, and had considered using a
yellow glue/water mix. Does that make any sense? Or should I just slap
paint at it til it looks ok?

TIA

Tanus
--
This is not really a sig.


This topic has 7 replies

ee

"eganders"

in reply to Tanus on 27/08/2006 11:29 PM

28/08/2006 4:37 AM


You could also try shellac as a primer.
Tanus wrote:
> We found a dollhouse that had been tossed out in the trash and decided
> to fix it. Mostly it was gluing up bad joints and repairing some small
> wood pieces that had broken off from abuse.
>
> The floor is hardboard which is holding up pretty well, but the walls
> are all 3/8" particle board. They had been covered with wallpaper, which
> SWMBO wanted removed and the board cleaned for painting. I"ve done most
> of that, but I have a concern about painting the boards. I have a
> feeling that it'll suck up as much paint as we can throw at it and still
> look pretty splotchy.
>
> Has anyone ever successfully painted particle board? I was thinking of
> adding some sizing to it to fill it up, and had considered using a
> yellow glue/water mix. Does that make any sense? Or should I just slap
> paint at it til it looks ok?
>
> TIA
>
> Tanus
> --
> This is not really a sig.

tj

"the_tool_man"

in reply to Tanus on 27/08/2006 11:29 PM

28/08/2006 5:18 AM

Hi Tanus:

Use a coat (maybe two) of BIN-123 or Kilz shallac-based primer. It
forms a nearly waterproof barrier and dries fast. Be sure you get the
shellac kind, not latex.

Regards,
John.

Tanus wrote:
> We found a dollhouse that had been tossed out in the trash and decided
> to fix it. Mostly it was gluing up bad joints and repairing some small
> wood pieces that had broken off from abuse.
>
> The floor is hardboard which is holding up pretty well, but the walls
> are all 3/8" particle board. They had been covered with wallpaper, which
> SWMBO wanted removed and the board cleaned for painting. I"ve done most
> of that, but I have a concern about painting the boards. I have a
> feeling that it'll suck up as much paint as we can throw at it and still
> look pretty splotchy.
>
> Has anyone ever successfully painted particle board? I was thinking of
> adding some sizing to it to fill it up, and had considered using a
> yellow glue/water mix. Does that make any sense? Or should I just slap
> paint at it til it looks ok?
>
> TIA
>
> Tanus
> --
> This is not really a sig.

TT

Tanus

in reply to Tanus on 27/08/2006 11:29 PM

29/08/2006 1:15 AM

[email protected] wrote:

>
> Use a first coat of Zinnser BIN primer or something simlar (pigmented
> shellac)

Thanks guys. I really liked the idea of drywall compound, but because
it's already built, it'll be a bearcat to get the mud into the corners
in such a small space. I'll try shellac since it seems to be the most
popular solution.

Really appreciate the responses.

Tanus

ss

"sweetsawdust"

in reply to Tanus on 27/08/2006 11:29 PM

27/08/2006 10:47 PM

Kilz You can get it at any local paint/hardware store etc in a
spray can. I understand it even comes in color now, although I still use
plain white. Spray or brush it on board and when dry Paint it as you
like. Only down side I have found is the paint will scratch under hard use.
"Tanus" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:[email protected]...
> We found a dollhouse that had been tossed out in the trash and decided
> to fix it. Mostly it was gluing up bad joints and repairing some small
> wood pieces that had broken off from abuse.
>
> The floor is hardboard which is holding up pretty well, but the walls
> are all 3/8" particle board. They had been covered with wallpaper, which
> SWMBO wanted removed and the board cleaned for painting. I"ve done most
> of that, but I have a concern about painting the boards. I have a
> feeling that it'll suck up as much paint as we can throw at it and still
> look pretty splotchy.
>
> Has anyone ever successfully painted particle board? I was thinking of
> adding some sizing to it to fill it up, and had considered using a
> yellow glue/water mix. Does that make any sense? Or should I just slap
> paint at it til it looks ok?
>
> TIA
>
> Tanus
> --
> This is not really a sig.

l

in reply to Tanus on 27/08/2006 11:29 PM

28/08/2006 12:00 PM

In article <[email protected]>, Tanus <[email protected]> wrote:
>We found a dollhouse that had been tossed out in the trash and decided
>to fix it. Mostly it was gluing up bad joints and repairing some small
>wood pieces that had broken off from abuse.
>
>The floor is hardboard which is holding up pretty well, but the walls
>are all 3/8" particle board. They had been covered with wallpaper, which
>SWMBO wanted removed and the board cleaned for painting. I"ve done most
>of that, but I have a concern about painting the boards. I have a
>feeling that it'll suck up as much paint as we can throw at it and still
>look pretty splotchy.
>
>Has anyone ever successfully painted particle board? I was thinking of
>adding some sizing to it to fill it up, and had considered using a
>yellow glue/water mix. Does that make any sense? Or should I just slap
>paint at it til it looks ok?
>
>TIA
>
>Tanus
>--
>This is not really a sig.

Use a first coat of Zinnser BIN primer or something simlar (pigmented
shellac)
--

Larry Wasserman Baltimore, Maryland
[email protected]

lt

"leonard"

in reply to Tanus on 27/08/2006 11:29 PM

27/08/2006 10:14 PM

Hi I would try a thin coat of drywall compound then paint.

len

n

in reply to Tanus on 27/08/2006 11:29 PM

29/08/2006 5:01 AM

Zinsser Seal Coat is a DEWAXED shellac that any finish can topcoat.

On 29 Aug 2006 01:15:39 +0200, Tanus <[email protected]> wrote:

>[email protected] wrote:
>
>>
>> Use a first coat of Zinnser BIN primer or something simlar (pigmented
>> shellac)
>
>Thanks guys. I really liked the idea of drywall compound, but because
>it's already built, it'll be a bearcat to get the mud into the corners
>in such a small space. I'll try shellac since it seems to be the most
>popular solution.
>
>Really appreciate the responses.
>
>Tanus


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