Good video, but I've found the most effective way of cleaning rollers is to tie them onto the outside of a deep sea submarine. Once it returns, after about a week of spending time at depths of 2000ft, the roller is good to go again.
Super simple explanations for extremely helpful hints. No five minute preamble before instructions. Thank you for your videos, man!! Very useful for the amateur painter!!
Thanks good video. I spin my roller after squeezing out the paint and after washing it. I used to be an auto mechanic in the olden days. In 1973 I repaired a painters van and he gave me 2 nice USED brushes as a tip. I have used them ever since and they are still in good condition.
7 years later, and still a helpful tip. I am just a home-gamer, so I only have to wash a roller a few times a decade, but the water fountain trick works awesome! The drain slope of my sink made the fountain only come out one side, so I stuck one of those really small tupperwear containers (don't tell my wife!) into the top to "plug" the roller, and tilted it to direct the fountain for full coverage.
@@godbluffvdgg the secret is to turn the roller straight up and down stand right behind a 5 gallon bucket and spray the hose right up against the roller as it spins it hits the bucket shielding you from all of its spray and it's pretty clean that way
@@zorroonmilkavitch1840 LOL...I've been painting for 30 years...You know how many times I've done that?...And, guess how many times I got soaked, at least my pant's legs?...I'll give you a hint...It rhymes with; brevy...::)...You're better off just using a five way and a running stream of water...
I USED to do that. But it wears out the Roller Handle to save a $1 Roller. In addition to everything everyone else said. The OP's idea is better than yours, but it waists more water than a cheap Roller costs. If you’ve used a high dollar Roller like a textured applicator or something it might make sense to clean and reuse. But I don't see buying expensive Rollers if a $1 Roller and a $3 Roller Handle will do. Then just throw the mess away.
Use the garden hose sprayer nozzle. Use shower setting at first; it has much more pressure than your kitchen sink to really dig the paint out of the nap. To finish, turn your nozzle to jet and use the water jet to make your roller spin.
I'm a total amateur but after i wash my brush I put hair conditioner on my it and rinse. It comes out beautiful, especially on older brushes. Thanks for the tips
Tried that hair conditioner trick. The first part of next day sucked. Brissles were getting full of clumps and lots of booger on your work. Rewashed outside asap. Work like new after rewash. I use only ( corona. Excaliber ) brushes. The best definatley
He starts off by saying " how to wash a roller like a pro" pros don't use customers sinks. It must be for demonstration purpose( I'm assuming it's his house)
If you use your brush for extended periods sometimes there's paint dried on in the middle of the bristles. I've found using a wire brush helps to remove the caked on paint while running under water.
The best way to wash it is to wash it like u wash it hair. Wet, soap rub, rinse and repeat about 2 to three times. Make sure you did in the middle. U get back clean fluffy paint rollers and brushes.. washing indefinitely waste water and time. Just use detergent
I like this method. May I suggest that if you have an old kiddie pool laying around, to fill that up to the top and first swish the roller around in the pool; most of the discoloration from the paint will come out of the roller. Refill the kiddie pool, and re-rinse the roller. After that's done, put the roller back on the cage, and go turn on the street fire hydrant, full blast, and then lower the roller into the blasting stream of water. This will leave your roller completely paint free but sopping wet. After this is done, open a roll of bounty paper towels. About $4. Roll out the paper towels on a sidewalk, and just run the roller onto the paper towel pathway you've made. This will leave it 90 percent dry. Take the roller inside. Turn on a high pressure hair dryer. Move the blower back and forth for about 20 minutes vigorously until warm and dry. Then take a hair comb, and gently comb your roller starting from bottom to top. Then flip it. Comb it now bottom to top. Now give it a name.
lol the worst part of this vid is the waste of water....you multiplied it by 50 gallons....and then refill the pool with another 50 gal. There is just so much fail in your post and this guy's post...just pray it with a hose and let it spin on the roller....2 gals of water and your roller is spotless....I just don't get it sometimes.
1. You have a spinner. Just use the spinner in an empty 5 gal bucket to get most of the paint out. Then spin the roller in a 5 gal bucket full of water. Then back to the empty to spin it dry. Do this 2 or 3 times, takes 2 minutes tops, and the roller is clean and dry. 2. Clean a brush with a wire brush. Rinse it to get most of the paint out. Then brush through the bristles with a wire brush (and brush paint of the handle if there is any), rinse one more time and either shake or spin the brush dry. Lastly, put the brush back in its sleeve to maintain its shape. 3. Don't clean paint tools in a kitchen sink. That's what utility tubs, or buckets outside are for.
Fill a 5 gallon bucket half full. With the roller cover still on the frame, pump it up and down aggressively into the water. Dump the water. Repeat until clean. It only takes a couple times and it will be 100% clean. Then give the roller a quick spin out to "fluff" the nap back out and it's like new again. I've been using the same Colossus and White Dove roller covers for a long time and they are perfect still after hundreds of jobs.
I buy good quality roller covers because I like the results and the finish they provide. I have never found the results of a used/cleaned roller cover to match the results of a new one. When I am done with the job, I use a 5 in 1 tool to "scrape" the excess paint into the can, place a sheet of plastic wrap over the paint surface in the can so it won't dry out, and throw the roller cover in the trash. Even good roller covers do not cost enough for me to bother cleaning them. I have never found the results of a used/cleaned roller cover to match the results of a new one. If I do not finish the paint job in one day, I scrape the roller cover and inset it back into its original wrapper, leaving it on the roller frame. Fold over the open end. Even with latex paint, it will "keep" like this for several days. Then, when you are ready to finish, just take the wrapper off and start painting.
That's very interesting. I was trained to use a wire brush and then put a garden hose into the brush and form a circle with my fingers, pretty much doing exactly what you said not to do. The guy I worked for was a painter for 20 years and had good brushes that were several years old.
+michaelCohenlyingPOS that's what I'm talking about...flip those brushes and hog the water to them...I soap my brushes with dove bar soap shape them and then let them dry...helps them keep shape and stops the bristles from drying if their sitting for a while...other than that wire brush and hot water... maybe a little soap to cut the paint if I'm Killin time
michaelCohenlyingPOS Thanks for the tip. I've lost some covers and if i'm hearing you guys right maybe some soap will help them old brushes get back to form. Right on.
The best comb is called a 'slicker brush' which is normally used in pet grooming. Probably not the best for the bristles but if you start to get crusty paint accumulating deeper in the paint brush, it works really well to scrape it out.
Expressions Painting had some useful tips in properly washing/storing brushes and rollers except he mentioned some "DO NOTS" and "TIPS" that are false or that waste too much water. I have been professionally painting interior/exterior residential homes going on 11 years now so I personally know from experience that running water into a brush through the bristles extracts most if not all remaining paint left inside the bristles and doesnt effect the brushs performance in anyway; as long as you use a wire brush to comb down in a one-way stroke motion until all the dried up stipple stuck on the outside of the bristles is removed and you have shook/spun all the remaining water out before placing back into case it came in. Cleaning the roller in the sink by allowing water to overflow top of roller takes too much time and a lot of unnecessary water. I personally use an outside water hose and pressure nozzle to spin the roller as I spray back and forth to both ends of the roller until all paint is out. Spinning the roller with high pressure water removes all paint and foreign objects; at the same time drying the bristles and drawn out the original shape of the roller.
There is nothing wrong with cleaning a brush in a bucket. Saves on water. Also, a lot of good brushes use plastic instead of wood up in the boot of the brush. I use Purdy brushes and have never had an issue getting the boot wet. Just don’t leave your brush soaking in water beyond the boot. This might lead to bristles falling out of the boot. Cleaning it the way you just cleaned that brush will not get all the paint out of the boot, IMO. It’s inevitable, if you use a brush all day, that paint will get up in the boot area. It’s ok to get the boot wet. Just make sure you let it dry right after. I’ll usually boot off the excess water and wrap the brush in a rag to keep its shape. The next day, I’ll throw it back into it’s cardboard sleeve.
Maybe 10 gallons tops, for the worst rollers.. only a few for a brush. That's a lot better than replacing a $20 brush every time you paint. Imagine a professional painter throwing away $5000 worth of brushes every year. .
Greg A I was thinking the same exact thing what a huge waste of water. 👎 You can clean a roller using much less water so many painter I know leave the water running it's such a huge waste.
Paint roller/brush spinners are cheap compared to reduced time/water required with out a mechanical spin out . They , of coarse mandate the clean up be done in a laundry tube , where it should be done any how . First stage of roller clean can be done in paint tray in laundry tub . Fill the tray with water and pressure roll cover (still on arm) into tray as though filling with paint. this ,with minimum water, will clear 80% of paint left in roller after first using the tool pictured to take out bulk paint. Then hand massage roller/brush under running water 'spinning' out frequently till clear. Finish off with very small amount of dish detergent in final wash. (as a pro I NEVER let my best latex brush dry out . It has never been allowed to dry out between paint projects so NO paint residue has formed and 8 years later still works like new. (it is impossible to remove 100% of paint residue from heel of a brush)
The drill trick works really well , I have done it many times. I use a tall cardboard box with top open , and hold my drill downward in the box, so that the colour splashes are only on the inside of the box. An old bin will do too. I love your neighbour comment though , very funny !
Everybody does it different even pro's. The amount of water he is using probably amounts to less than a shower are bath. We live in a first world not third world , so I don't see a problem. The sink is stanless steel and the paint is latex so it will not hurt the plumbing are stop up the plumbing and all of you pro painters, don't say you have never used a customer's sink on a cold are rainy day and if you say you have not you my friend are fibbing. I soak my brushes and naps first before cleaning that removes most of the paint then I spin my naps on a roller outside of course and I wash my brushes with the hose between my legs so can use both hands to massage the paint from the brush and then use a painters comb to straighten the brush before putting it away. Like I said everbody does it different and if the customer does not have a problem with using there sink why the heck not, just clean up after yourself and be courteous. I don't like using a customer's bathroom ether but sometimes you cannot help it, always ask first and clean up after yourself and be courteous. He is not trying to teach all you know it alls he is trying to help people who do not paint much and I can guarantee that the people he is reaching have no problem using there sinks. Nice video my fellow painter. I even learn a couple of things myself.Always learning.....
@Sven3xs problem is he's claiming that a pro would use this system to clean a brush and roller bottom line is a roller done professionally should be put on a paint spinner in a five gallon bucket with a minimal amount of water used
What I did was got an old roller frame straightened the handle stem. I then cut the stem leaving about 5in attached to the roller frame. Put on your paint filled roller attach stem to power drill. Dip into center of clean paint bucket and spin. The centrifugal force takes all the work out. Wash what little remains and conserve water. Always use eye protection.
A local barmaid told me that her husband had done the final freshen up on their old toilet bowl by putting it in the dish washer in which it just about fitted in after removing the trays. He did not consult her first...
After scraping bulk of paint off roller, garden hose nozzle rinses and spins roller fast, use 5gal bucket as shield for spray from spinning roller. Idaho Painter has a vid showing this, and a few others. Requires outdoor area that can soak up some paint. My fav method so far.
In the amount of time it takes to clean a roller cover you could roll out an entire room as it's not worth the time and effort to save $6 ... unless you're in a pinch and really need to clean it for some odd reason which does happen from time to time . Unless you're incredibly cheap or bad at math as labor and time is a lot more profitable than a $6 roller cover .... most professional painters have these in stock and just toss when done .
When washing a brush you turn the brush upside down flow the water deep into the brush hairs if you don't the area he's talking about the ferrule. hopefully I spelled it right, will harden cause it's also known as the reservoir.as you paint it fills you need to empty it, he is right don't leave a brush in bucket of water,it will break you brush over time.how he showed you not to clean the brush,is actually how you clean a brush.ty
Attach brushes and rollers to your belt and go swimming in the sea or local rivers or ponds. It leaves lovely colourful clouds at first but dont worry. A 300 meter swim thoroughly cleans the most stubborn items. And your sweaty armpits too.
I find it easier to soak them in a bucket of warm water for 10 minutes or so, after removing the excess paint with the 5 in 1. Most of the remaining paint will separate from the roller on its own, settle to the bottom of the bucket, & the roller will rinse out in a few seconds after soaking.
You clean your rollers like that on my job, you would be fired...You have a your 5 way...Use it...We fill one 5 gal bucket with clean water...clean off the roller with the 5 way till you can see the core...Then finish it in a sink with a touch of dish soap and rinse...Takes about 5 minutes total...You're using WAYYYYYYY to much water! We are cleaning 5 rollers or more in a day...
godbluffvdgg true,I usually wrap the roller sleeves in plastic with a bit of tape to keep the air out,good to go next morning.Throw them out end of job.All cost passed on to client.Small jobs,clean & save the sleeves for other jobs.
@@jonomason4256 Sorry for the late reply but; I do the same thing...The 18's cost 10 bucks so they're worth keeping decent...9's? I buy them by the box...the 3 bucks isn't worth the time...
Hey Remi, thanks for this. On the surface, painting looks easy. But, the art is in the details, isn't it. Who knew that I was cleaning my brushes wrong!
Rookie.......1. don't wash you tools in your or your customers nice stainless steel sink ( I have let "painters" go for doing this, if it's "your" sink, no problem ). 2. use a 5 gallon bucket (or utility sink) with water and submerge your roller and brush to clean them and repeat till water is paint free. 3. use a wire brush to clean the paint off your brush. much quicker with better results.
Lol. You don’t think this is the content creators own actual sink? I think you are trying to come across as some hard a$$-know-it-all when you made yourself look dumb. The point of the video wasn’t “this is how a contractor should clean his brush in their clients sink”. He was showing us how to do it. Likely in his own house. Probably why he was painting in his socks in these early videos. I’m seriously doubting he would do that in a clients house. Rookie.
Emulsion roller sleeves and brushes I put in an old pillow case then in washing machine on the rinse cycle. The pillow case helps protect the brush bristles from damage by the holes in the drum.
Sscrape paint out with 5 n 1 and then use a roller spinner or water hose leave roller cover on handle and spin it out with water ad have u ever heard of a wire brush that's how u clean a brush ur a pro iiiii don't kno about that
I'm sure the city and people in your town are very happy your pouring latex paint into the sewer system. How many gallons of paint do you figure you've poured down the drain? I hope your local EPA sues your ass, completely illegal.
Don't ever wash out in the clients sink especially the kitchen sink. Not only does it make you look unprofessional you run the risk of staining the sink with dirty paint water. Unless its one of those plastic garage sinks then you should be ok..
+ExpressionsPainting most paint stains stainless sinks and leavs a residue in most dark stone sinks communication is NOT what's important when you're cleaning you're materials...take zip locks for you're brushes and rollers garbage bags for cages trays and cut buckets take them home and wash them in you're own sink...any credible painter has a slop sink...
Stainless is stainless! if you have any problem with stains get some solvent on it. What stains stainless is tiny particles that are foreign to stainless that rusts ontop. So might as well clean it out.
bullitsc i had caught construction workers with 30 yrs experience wash their crap in my nice new kitchen sink and that’s AFTER I showed them where the slop sink is .. but of course they were too lazy to walk the extra 50 feet to the slop sink in the laundry room and used my kitchen sink coz it was closer. I threw them the fuck out, unpaid. NEVER mess with a smart woman.
- Paint is going into the sewers / pipes. Here in France, that's illegal and can be fined quite a lot. - Paint in the sink of the place he is painting, big no-no ... - Wasting so much water !! Overall terrible advice that also makes me cringe.
P5ykoOHD I completely agree with your points. I have been a WB paint user for years. I hate oil products and refuse to use clients products but it's still legal in the UK. thankfully the government are making a move to phase them out. but this guy is cleaning WB paint so my main gripe is the volume of water bring wasted in this instance
@@hncat78 the fact is oil based products pollute much less or little to no water then latex-based paints people that use oil-based paints keep all of the vocs and thinners in one bucket and dispose of them in a proper manner
I prefer to use a snorkel and take the roller down to about 45 ft and youll see a cloud of paint after about an hour and a half u should have most of it out lol what the hell kind of video is this....really lol
What I do is either wrap the roller or brush very tightly in a plastic bag, it could stay like that for weeks without drying out. But that only works if you have to leave the work overnight or something and will continue with the same color the next day, for different colors I just get new sets.
A trick i learned if you plan to stop painting but want to pick back up the next day with the same roller. Just wrap the paint soaked roller in a plastic grocery bag and put it in the refrigerator. You can leave it in there for a few days. When you take it out of the refrigerator, it's ready to go. Just like you put it in the bag. This works with Latex paint , not sure about oil base.
Even so called good rollers aren't even worth cleaning. Look at the quality of the spread when you use a pre used roller. Its terrible. But most people are to ignorant to think of that. All they think about is putting a buck or 2 into their pocket. They don't care about the quality of their workmanship.
@@makaveliAkaTheDon be honest with you I never believed in washing roller covers ,not worth the time just buy another one. Brushes garden hose ,wire brush and your good .
The middle part that holds the hair or plastic fibers together is the ferrule. Its the tip (the brush end), the barrel (middle of brush) then the ferrule, the crimped part, then the handle.
If I have a good brush I will keep it and wash it. I stopped washing rollers years ago. I just throw them away and buy a new one. It uses too much water to clean them completely.
I buy extra fitting brushes for cleaning copper fittings. Works awesome on paint brushes. Really gets the paint out specially if it's starting to dry at the top of the paint line. Just dont drag the fitting brush really hard. It will ruin your paint brush in a few passes. But lays down the bristles better.
Here in the UK our water is metered and charged, so probably cheaper and more enjoyable to throw away the roller sleeve and go get a cold beer. Good video all the same!
I'm a pro painter I would never bother washing a roller cover, times to valuable, the time it takes to wash covers go buy another 1.i would only wash a cover in an emergency if I ran out of covers which I try not to do, and if I wash brushes never use a customers sink even if they allow it, ty
That space he's referring to,is,known as the reservoir,you do want to force as much water as possible into the reservoir,to get the paint out,which is done by holding the brush upside down,forcing water in between hairs,
In winter use a utility sink or what we refer to as a laundry tub..not the kitchen sink, rinse and use the spinner.. In the summer wash outside with garden hose, use the spinner or as someone else mentioned spray with gardern hose while the sleve is on the roller and get it spinning. Once done and if I'm not using the roller again right away I always put the roller or brush in a ziplock and put in freezer (my freezer not someone I would be painting for) and the roller/brush will always be fresh when you go to reuse days/weeks or months later.
@@benstormbadass1936 we can always talk in other language if you know any other then english ,,but i dont think you have the education for that ahhahahahahahha
After I've gone through the exercise of washing out as much as possible, my rollers go in the washing machine for a rinse cycle (water based paints only of course). It works a treat for me, but please don't send the bill for your clogged up machine to me. The alternative approach is to use cheap roller brushes, store them in a sealed plastic bag between coats and then throw them away after you've finished with that colour. Sometimes life is too short...
how do you keep the paint from drying to the middle upper portion of the brush as you paint? (I'm just an amateur with great respect for the pros who make it look so easy)
You can't really stop that. But you can minimize the inconvenience by washing your brush more often.... wrapping it tightly in plastic when you're not using it. And not leave the brush sitting in a gallon of paint since that puts paint usually a little too high on the bristles. :)
j_romeo you turn the brush upside down, don't listen to that nonsense, if you buy a good enough brush like I do a purdy.... Then you just turn it upside, stick a ruler or something flat directly in the centre without damaging the bristles, then run under warm water never use cold as this hardens the paint, and u can use some washing up liquid as well... Had my brushes about 3 years and never had a bristle fall out if so, then with purdy you can always go and get a new one for free, it's their policy! Check it out.. And give my way ago let me no what you think....don't buy a cheap brush
I'm a mason, not a painter, but when i paint my house i just wrap the rollers in plastic bags and use later if same color. ex. Ceiling paint, or primer. They last a couple weeks before drying out. Throw them away when I'm done. Aint nobody got time for that!
Used to wash rollers not any more . Multi pack rollers are cheap enough now . White emulsion roller is the one to store wet to reuse . Coloured emulsion rollers sleeves dispose of after use it cost more in time and mess to wash out.
I don't agree with this method, it waste more water than necessary. I first rinse my roller in a 5 gallon bucket to get most of the paint out then massage the remaining under warm running water. For quality brushes, I use a chemical brush cleaner even with water based paints then rinse under warm water. The chemical cleaner will do a better job in cleaning the brush than water alone and will make the brush as if it were brand new. Cleaning with water alone only removes the wet paint, any paint that has already dried a little inside the bristles will not be removed.
You are spot on. Wrap them up with plastic like he said take them home, and use your utility sink. Start first in a bucket so you don't use a thousand gallons of water that you're getting charged for.
@@johnstawicki3185 Like another guy said here, use a bucket either way so u dont make a in the customers sink. It also scratches it. I learned the hard way and had to to replace one in a new construction house. Any good job sup thats been doing it for a while will say they have had this issue at some point.
@OgGarcioVegareally this guy is from planet what anyway it's ridiculous this guy must not be a pro and he must be? Well I'm never at a loss for words but I am here
I most always use an outside faucet and a hose if possible. I always carry a short piece of garden hose. Rollers I charge to the job. Brushes I clean while running a brush comb thru it with the water running on it. The comb gets a lot of paint out in a hurry. I then shake the brush out and take a paper towel or terry cloth and squeeze the brush with it to get more water out; comb it again and hang to dry. I rigged a wire clothes hanger to dry brushes on. I can hang the brushes in my truck or trailer without the bristles leaning against anything. Never use a customer's sink. If I can't use the outside faucet or a utility sink I will wrap the brush in some plastic or a wet cloth and clean it at home.
It's funny how many people are exaggerating the amount of water being used. You're talking a few cents worth of water vs $15-25 for a decent brush and $7-$15 or so for a decent roller.
I stopped cleaning rollers, as it is quite hard to get them really clean and ready for the next job. They are inexpensive enough to throw away. When I have a project, and several rooms to do, I keep the roller in a sealed freezer bag until needed (one for each color). I don't freeze them, the bag is just to prevent evaporation. I can be one or two weeks between uses without issues.
This is how NOT to wash painting tools. No "PRO" does this. PROs do it outside with less water. 5 gallon buckets dude. This guy must not live with a woman or if he does this at a job site he would get fired.