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If the brushes wash up in soap and water, and they do, then to most people it's 'latex'.
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Just trying to keep the discussion factually accurate......people look to these threads for advice.
I wouldn't want a reader of this thread to believe that latex paint would ever be appropriate on working surfaces such as kitchen cabinets! So, to refer to any water-based paint as latex can be very confusing and misleading to the uninformed reader. |
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My wife thought she would paint a table with latex without telling me. You can imagine how well that turned out. |
Enamel is like an epoxy and dries to a hard finish, even the water-based stuff.
Washable. Good for door trim and cabinets. Very different from latex. Latex will fill in the corner cracks and flex with wall movement. |
What would be the most appropriate paint for interior doors?
Would that be an application of the Advance paint? I always seem to have trouble getting paint to level on doors. I probably work the paint too much trying to get coverage. |
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My second choice would be Benjamin Moore Impervo oil base, but it's harder and harder to find now. |
I have a bunch of doors that need painting. I can always do one at a time starting with the developed basement and move to the upstairs.
On my first attempt with these (safe and sound) doors, I found that they sucked up so much paint unless they were primed again over the original primer. What primer would you use for alkyd enamel topcoat? |
Orbital sand, quick hand sand (150 ish), vacuum, prime with Zinser 1-2-3, quick hand sand, vacuum, apply Advance with a short nap roller. Repeat the last step. Done.
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