Superb work Mark always a favourite job of mine painting vintage wood windows. The white gloss really finishes them perfectly very neat work around the panes.
I’m older than you we used to burn off to bare wood then prepare then knot the wood twice then use pink Permoglaze wood primer then putty and prepare again then undercoat then gloss looked great before 2010 voc shit came along. Permoglaze’s paint was great until crown brought them out and threw them under a bus 🚌
Great video 👍that brush u r using are incredible. Most people don’t know that!Friendly tip! If you need to apply glazing putty to the mullions I mix Sheetrock 45 with the putty to speed up the drying process! Oil primer over the glazing then top coat with a 100% acrylic. Cheers!
learning a lot from your videos mate keep them coming in :) , I'm doing a renovation on the living room atm, wallpaper came off without a problem but the glue adhesive/previous paintwork/ latex shit is taking the buggers to come off. I've had to use the wallpaper steamer again just to remove it, the downside is the crumbly plaster behind either falls off if it's too wet or gets a few deep scrapes, can't win. In the end I managed to do the whole living room and I'm now patching up everything with plaster, sanding and caulking between frames/etc. The one thing I found really annoying has been hairline cracks through top to bottom of the plaster in areas. I'm supposing I drill holes throughout the crack, fill lightly with foam, wait to dry, after cut/sand off the excess foam , plaster the holes , sand, and then lastly paint adhesive pva mixed with water over it, wait to dry and then paint? If I have that wrong in any respect please let me know (I'll be doing this at the end just before entire room is ready for the last coats of paint).
Hi, any tips with regards to painting the interior of a single glazed sash window? Oil, solvent or water base? Struggling to decide, I want it as robust as possible for all the cold months when condensation builds up. Cheers
Water based gloss on the inside will save you all the yellowing. Since access is easy compared to the exterior, longevity isn't as critical because you can repair/repaint whenever. Because the interior is a less harsh environment, the paint will last longer anyway.
Top vid from a top man least your still making them unlike that flash what's happened to him is he still alive hope so I do like old flash ..you were both once the A team
where didja get that nice little window sash brush. I found one but it was crap. Couldn't run a line with it so just used it for inside windows with tape. I'm looking for some good ones the same shape. Perfect for those sort of windows.
wrong wrong u work from the inside out and u always cup onto the glass slightly to seal windows from the elements ie weather didnt u say u painted that house last time in your previous vids
Someone's just got their btec in painting windows. He knows you need a paint lap the glass, he means he's lapping it over existing paint. Doesn't matter the order if you know what you're doing. The finish will be the same I can assure you.