15 Attachment(s)
Sanding and Priming a Varnished Daybed to paint white
Hi I have a wooden daybed as below. I think its from Indonesia so not sure the wood type. I believe its varnished as where I have sanded there is a white powdery substance.
I have been using 120 grit. We intend to prime it and then topcoat with a exterior water based enamel in white. Is that Heresy to a woodworking forum?
It sits outside under broad eaves but receives a fair amount of sun.
Attachment 412525Attachment 412526Attachment 412527Attachment 412528Attachment 412529Attachment 412530
some questions if anyone can help
Q1
I am finding the intricate parts hard to degloss, you can fold the sand paper and try to get into all the crevices but its quite hard.
Would a dremel with accessory like this
Attachment 412531
https://dremel.com.au/en-au/Accessor....aspx?pid=512E
or this
Attachment 412532
https://dremel.com.au/en-au/Accessor...px?pid=EZ473SA
the problem is i might start sanding the detail away.
Or just stick to sanding?
Q2
Post sanding I will vacuum down the works. But I would like to wipe it down with a moist cloth, if the primer coat is oil based would mineral turps be okay and water if I use a water based primer? but i dont want to affect the varnish somehow or cause the wood fibres to rise.
Q3
What is a suitable primer baring in mind the odd spot where deglossing hasnt properly occured?
I have come up with these 3. Is oil based still superior?
Zinsser Coverstain (oil based)
Dulux Prepcoat 1Step Oil Based Primer, Sealer & Undercoat (this was Dulux technical help line advice) - they recommended this over their Dulux Precision Range Max Adhesion primer which is their range to combat Zinsser.
SOLVER LINE 4311 - MAXI PSU - water based |
Q4
Topcoat
Dulux Aquaenamel water based so it doesnt yellow, maybe semi gloss.
Cheers
What liquid (solvent) to moisten a wrag with to clean dust from scuffed varnish coat
Hi guys, thanks for the replies.
I have almost scuffed (no dremel :>) the entire piece with 120 grit.
I will vacuum the dust off with a bristle tipped std vacuum. I dont have a compressor at present to blow it off.
Prior to the next coat whether Flood or straight to Zinsser Coverstain - what in addition to vacuuming can i do to ensure all the dust is off?
Given you clean oil based paint up in mineral turps, i was going to lightly moisten a cloth with turps and wipe it, constantly changing to a fresh section.
Is this fine? it wont react with the scuffed varnish? - i assume if i used Isopropyl Alcohol or Painter Thinners then it would negatively affect the varnish and negatively affect my primer coat.
Thanks