Paint Quality Institute

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Wood

Deck/Painted/Flaking or Peeling/To Be Painted

  1. Surface Preparation:
    NOTE‚ If lead is suspected in the paint, do not attempt to scrape, sand, power wash, use heat gun, etc., which might put lead into the environment, but rather contact a contractor qualified for lead assessment and abatement
    • remove all loose or poorly adhering paint by scraping, or by careful power washing using plain water; wear eye protection and work gloves; NOTE: woods that tend to be very soft, such as old and weathered cedar and redwood, can easily be damaged by the high pressure jet of power washing
    • feather sand rough edges of remaining paint; refresh surface of exposed, weathered wood by sanding; wear eye protection, work gloves and a dust mask
    • dull any glossy paint by sanding with fine (#220) grit garnet paper; wear eye protection, dust mask and work gloves
    • treat any mildew with a 3:1 water:household bleach mixture, leaving it on for 20 minutes and adding more as it dries; wear eye and skin protection; rinse thoroughly
    • remove dirt, chalk, dust, residual particles of paint, treated mildew, etc. by scrubbing with detergent and water, rinse thoroughly; or by careful power washing; eye protection and work gloves
  1. Priming:
    • after preparing the surface, apply primer
    • use quality exterior latex or oil-based primer recommended for repaint of deck surfaces
    • do not leave a primer unpainted
  1. Painting:
    • use top quality exterior latex deck paint if remaining paint is latex or is oil-based with excellent adhesion
    • use quality oil-based deck paint if surface has build up of old oil-based paint
    • do not apply oil-based paint over latex paint

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