Getting Rid of Paint on Old Varnish

Something I truly hate to see is nice old varnished woodwork where previous occupants have done a sloppy paint job and gotten splotches of paint all over it:

doorold1

As you can see, it was both red and light green paint.  God knows how long it was on there.

Such sloppiness is an insult to the spirit, feels like slum living really, so when this client asked me to paint this bedroom, I had to start by reviving the beauty of the woodwork.

I had to go at it, as my grandmother used to say, “like killing snakes.”  There was no advice on youtube on how to do it, so I just went at it with every tool I had.

So the first step was to take my Swiss army knife and just try to shave off the biggest chunks and just generally “break the seal” of the paint.  Then I actually used a dental cleaning tool to scrape the next layer off– I had to always be careful to not go too deep and ruin the finish or the wood.  Then I took a toothbrush and some alcohol and baking soda and again, it was like a dental cleaning, scrubbing it off.  Amazingly, the alcohol did not take off the original finish, but it softened the unwanted paint enough that it would scrub off.

It took a lot of hard high pressure scrubbing and it killed my hands, but I finally got 2 door jambs and two windows back to nearly original look.

door-222222222222

Still looks a little sloppy in this pic as I have not painted the wall yet, and I need to take a stain pen and fix a multitude of sins.  But oh my what a difference.

 

Author: admin

Hi, Justin here. I do handyman work in the Boston Metrowest area. I specialize in solving problems, like doors that don't close right, things that don't hang right, and many basic small repairs. Note, I don't do bigger projects like building decks, I prefer to fix things already installed. I love healing old houses and making things look right. Call 781 330 8143 or email handyauthor@gmail.com.

I don't always get notified of comments so email is better handyauthor@gmail.com