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Posted by Mulan on July 17, 2006, 8:39 pm
If it's the same kind of old panelling I had.... the grooves were rough
finish and the "panels" smooth finish. The rough grooves absorbed more
paint/primer so I had to do go over them with a thin brush before the
final coat to get it even. Or you might want some slight color
definition so it still looks like panelling??
barry@sme-online.com wrote:
> Mike wrote:
> > I am in the process of painting a room in my house that has somewhat
> > dark paneling. I have primed the whole room and then went back with a
> > brush and carefully went down each groove to make sure there I didn't
> > miss any spots. Well, the areas I re-painted with the brush look nice
> > and white, but the areas between the groove (where I just used a
> > roller) isn't as white. It's all covered, of course, but you can still
> > see some darkness coming through the primer. Do you think this will be
> > noticeable when I start painting it with a good latex paint? The new
> > color is "baked biscotti" (you gotta love the names they give paint
> > these days) and it's a kind of green (I think).
> >
> > I hate the thought of having to put another coat of primer on this, but
> > I want to do it right the first time. Thanks for any input...
> >
> > Mike
>
> And ... let me suggest, besides the (1) primer coat, planning on (2)
> finish coats. Keeping the first one moderate to light in thickness.
> (Don't try to force one coat to cover.)
>
> Sounds more like linguini than biscotti. :')
>
> J
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