House Painting Tips
So this past weekend I decided to go over to friends house to help her paint her house. It wsa my first time painting on such a large scale and so I had to learn everything from the ground up. Below are some tips that I learned this week:
- House paint is more durable in a glossy finish than in a flat finish. A glossy finish has a better “scrubability” rating than flatter finishes, but they also tend to reveal imperfections in the surface.
- High use areas should be painted with higher gloss paint. Lower use areas can use eggshell or flat finishes.
Interior house paint is available in several finishes…
- Flat
- Eggshell
- Semigloss
- Gloss
You’ll need to measure the area to be painted in order to know how much interior house paint you’ll need.
Here’s how to figure out the area of your walls…measure how wide each wall is and add these. The area is the total width multiplied by the height of your walls.
Next, measure the areas covered by trim, windows, fireplaces, wallpaper, etc. If these areas end up being more than 10 percent of your painting area, subtract their total square footage.
Now, check the spread rate of your paint. This will be listed on the paint can. Take your square footage and divide by the spread rate listed on the paint can.
Latex interior house paint requires a brush with synthetic bristles. Nylon brushes are fine, but they can lose their stiffness in hot conditions. Brushes with polyester bristles keep their stiffness in the heat and also stand up to water.
If you’re painting with oil based paint, you’ll need a natural bristle brush. Only use an appropriate solvent to clean the paint from these brushes, however. If you try to clean oil based paint from a natural bristle brush with water, for one thing, it just won’t work…but you’ll ruin the brush.
As with everything else, follow the clean up instructions on your paint can label.
Before you buy a brush, pick it up and hold it. See how it feels. Test the bristles with your hand. If it feels cheap, try the next highest priced brush.
I am hoping that after I get my equity home loan That will be able to do some painting of my own. I am pretty optimistic since my friend got her new home from a bad credit home loan. She had some problem with debt a credit cards, but it all worked out for her in the end.
Other Fun Stuff, Uncategorized, life lessons | Comment (0)Should High Schools have Finance Classes?
Due to the lack of financial education over the past twenty years, several generations of people have grown up with idea that using credit cards is ok and is a normal part of society. Some even take that to the extreme get into so much deb that it is very hard for them to get a home mortgage or to even get a home equity loan. In actuality they are the worst thing a person could have. By starting off early and teaching your kids the value of money, the majority of the battle will be won. This should be done as soon as possible in the education process. Kids can be taught simple values of money management and debt management. As for the rest of us, we have to fight our own wars with credit cards and debt. So ask yourself are you doing your part to save society from credit card debt?
Class Topics, Uncategorized | Comment (0)Hello world!
Welcome to your brand new blog at Edublogs.
To get started, simply log in, edit or delete this post and check out all the other options available to you.
There’s stacks of great supporting material too! Take time to view our some helpful introductory videos, read through our Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) or stop by The Edublogs Forums to chat with other edubloggers.
If you’ve got 4 minutes and 55 seconds, we’ve also put together a video introduction that you might like:
You can also subscribe to our brilliant free publication, The Edublogger, which is jammed with helpful tips, ideas and more.
And finally, if you like Edublogs but want to be able to simply create, administer, control and manage hundreds of student and teacher blogs at your school or college, check out Edublogs Campus… it’s like Edublogs in a box, all for you.
Thanks again for signing up with Edublogs!
Uncategorized | Comment (1)