Sc

Sonny

16/10/2011 9:54 AM

Door Issue

An online chat friend has, what appears to be, resin/color bleed-
through on a set of 4 interior doors (for a 6' wide doorway),
purchased from Lowes or Home Depot 11 years ago. She primed (X2) and
painted (X2, Sherwin Williams white acrylic) them, 11 yrs ago, and
they developed bleed through. She's always wanted to repair this
problem. I can only upload one pic onto Flickr, other pics are too
large for Flickr upload.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/43836144@N04/6250342364/in/photostream

The doors were raw wood, when purchased. It appears there's some, not
only color bleed through, but resin beaded-up, onto the surface, in
some other pics on some areas (not all) of the doors. I suspect the
wood was either not kiln dried properly, if at all. I don't know what
kind of wood it is, but I assume something typically off the shelf.

She thought the problem was the primer/paint. I'm suspecting it's the
wood/resin, not a primer-paint issue. I hope the pic, above, is
revealing enough.

Any thoughts and suggestions for repair/refinish would be
appreciated. I've recommended stripping/sanding and refinish with
Zinsser (*shellac) primer/stain blocker, before repainting.

Sonny


This topic has 7 replies

bb

basilisk

in reply to Sonny on 16/10/2011 9:54 AM

17/10/2011 9:22 AM

On Sun, 16 Oct 2011 19:04:27 -0700 (PDT), Sonny wrote:

> Was finally able to figure out how to crop a pic, for smaller size
> upload .... a not-so-closeup different view:
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/43836144@N04/6252407586/in/photostream
>
> Sonny

Sonny,

Download yourself a copy of irfanview, free, small program for
cropping, resizing, resampling, rescaling images and
it will do batch prcessing, relatively simple to use.

http://www.irfanview.com/

basilisk

MM

"Mike Marlow"

in reply to Sonny on 16/10/2011 9:54 AM

16/10/2011 6:49 PM

Sonny wrote:
> An online chat friend has, what appears to be, resin/color bleed-
> through on a set of 4 interior doors (for a 6' wide doorway),
> purchased from Lowes or Home Depot 11 years ago. She primed (X2) and
> painted (X2, Sherwin Williams white acrylic) them, 11 yrs ago, and
> they developed bleed through. She's always wanted to repair this
> problem. I can only upload one pic onto Flickr, other pics are too
> large for Flickr upload.
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/43836144@N04/6250342364/in/photostream
>
> The doors were raw wood, when purchased. It appears there's some, not
> only color bleed through, but resin beaded-up, onto the surface, in
> some other pics on some areas (not all) of the doors. I suspect the
> wood was either not kiln dried properly, if at all. I don't know what
> kind of wood it is, but I assume something typically off the shelf.
>
> She thought the problem was the primer/paint. I'm suspecting it's the
> wood/resin, not a primer-paint issue. I hope the pic, above, is
> revealing enough.
>
> Any thoughts and suggestions for repair/refinish would be
> appreciated. I've recommended stripping/sanding and refinish with
> Zinsser (*shellac) primer/stain blocker, before repainting.
>
> Sonny

I'm confused. Nothing about that picture looks like a primed and painted
piece of wood.

--

-Mike-
[email protected]

FH

Father Haskell

in reply to Sonny on 16/10/2011 9:54 AM

16/10/2011 9:13 PM

On Oct 16, 12:54=A0pm, Sonny <[email protected]> wrote:
> An online chat friend has, what appears to be, resin/color bleed-
> through on a set of 4 interior doors (for a 6' wide doorway),
> purchased from Lowes or Home Depot 11 years ago. =A0She primed (X2) and
> painted (X2, Sherwin Williams white acrylic) them, 11 yrs ago, and
> they developed bleed through. =A0She's always wanted to repair this
> problem. =A0I can only upload one pic onto Flickr, other pics are too
> large for Flickr upload.
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/43836144@N04/6250342364/in/photostream
>
> The doors were raw wood, when purchased. =A0It appears there's some, not
> only color bleed through, but resin beaded-up, onto the surface, in
> some other pics on some areas (not all) of the doors. =A0I suspect the
> wood was either not kiln dried properly, if at all. =A0I don't know what
> kind of wood it is, but I assume something typically off the shelf.
>
> She thought the problem was the primer/paint. =A0I'm suspecting it's the
> wood/resin, not a primer-paint issue. =A0I hope the pic, above, is
> revealing enough.
>
> Any thoughts and suggestions for repair/refinish would be
> appreciated. =A0I've recommended stripping/sanding and refinish with
> Zinsser (*shellac) primer/stain blocker, before repainting.
>
> Sonny

Dewaxed shellac -- Zinnser Sealcoat. Haven't had a knot
bleed through yet.

Sc

Sonny

in reply to Sonny on 16/10/2011 9:54 AM

16/10/2011 7:04 PM

Was finally able to figure out how to crop a pic, for smaller size
upload .... a not-so-closeup different view:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/43836144@N04/6252407586/in/photostream

Sonny

tn

tiredofspam

in reply to Sonny on 16/10/2011 9:54 AM

16/10/2011 2:38 PM

Obviously pine.

Always tough to get rid of a resinous pine resin.
Sand down to wood.
try soaking with acetone to melt the remaining resin pith..
Then shellac over.

Just unlucky piece of wood. When I grew up, we had a door that would
drip resin during summer and fall. In major amounts.
Just as if it were alive. I always got the feeling, it really was...
Never did stop leaking...

On 10/16/2011 12:54 PM, Sonny wrote:
> An online chat friend has, what appears to be, resin/color bleed-
> through on a set of 4 interior doors (for a 6' wide doorway),
> purchased from Lowes or Home Depot 11 years ago. She primed (X2) and
> painted (X2, Sherwin Williams white acrylic) them, 11 yrs ago, and
> they developed bleed through. She's always wanted to repair this
> problem. I can only upload one pic onto Flickr, other pics are too
> large for Flickr upload.
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/43836144@N04/6250342364/in/photostream
>
> The doors were raw wood, when purchased. It appears there's some, not
> only color bleed through, but resin beaded-up, onto the surface, in
> some other pics on some areas (not all) of the doors. I suspect the
> wood was either not kiln dried properly, if at all. I don't know what
> kind of wood it is, but I assume something typically off the shelf.
>
> She thought the problem was the primer/paint. I'm suspecting it's the
> wood/resin, not a primer-paint issue. I hope the pic, above, is
> revealing enough.
>
> Any thoughts and suggestions for repair/refinish would be
> appreciated. I've recommended stripping/sanding and refinish with
> Zinsser (*shellac) primer/stain blocker, before repainting.
>
> Sonny

LJ

Larry Jaques

in reply to Sonny on 16/10/2011 9:54 AM

16/10/2011 8:20 PM

On Sun, 16 Oct 2011 19:04:27 -0700 (PDT), Sonny <[email protected]>
wrote:

>Was finally able to figure out how to crop a pic, for smaller size
>upload .... a not-so-closeup different view:
>
>http://www.flickr.com/photos/43836144@N04/6252407586/in/photostream

First off, that looks like a mighty thin coat of paint. Second, you're
probably right that if she strips and puts BIN over it, then sprays
the enamel on, it should keep the wood tamed down.

I'd strip and then wipe it down very wetly with lacquer thinner and
let it dry thoroughly before putting the Zinsser on.

--
...in order that a man may be happy, it is
necessary that he should not only be capable
of his work, but a good judge of his work.
-- John Ruskin

bb

basilisk

in reply to Sonny on 16/10/2011 9:54 AM

17/10/2011 9:25 AM

On Sun, 16 Oct 2011 14:38:42 -0400, tiredofspam wrote:

> Obviously pine.
>
> Always tough to get rid of a resinous pine resin.
> Sand down to wood.
> try soaking with acetone to melt the remaining resin pith..

I have had better luck with isopropyl alcohol(not the drug store variety)
on SYP anyway.
> Then shellac over.
>


basilisk


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