Vinyl Shutter Paint Color
#1
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Vinyl Shutter Paint Color
Painting exterior vinyl shutters, primed with 123 Zinnser first by brush.
Shutters are burgundy and I'd like to paint with a bright red.
I read somewhere that you shouldn't go too much deeper in color than the original or it could cause a heat build up. Not sure if that's true thou.
Would it be better to use a duller color, say grey? Either would look good.
Thanks.
Shutters are burgundy and I'd like to paint with a bright red.
I read somewhere that you shouldn't go too much deeper in color than the original or it could cause a heat build up. Not sure if that's true thou.
Would it be better to use a duller color, say grey? Either would look good.
Thanks.
#2
Vinyl siding is color sensitive but shutters are made out of heavier material and as far as I know there are no color restrictions when painting them. Red is a hard color to get coverage with, normally it's best to use a grey primer underneath the red as the red will cover grey better than it will white.
Keely voted this post useful.
#4
Painting vinyl requires a special "hot" primer to bite into the vinly/plastic!
https://www.rustoleum.com/product-ca...d-vinyl-bonder
https://www.rustoleum.com/product-ca...d-vinyl-bonder
Keely voted this post useful.
#6
#8
123 is a good primer to use for slick surfaces... but the key is to let it dry longer than what the can says before top coating. 48 hours is better on a product that doesn't absorb water. (It has to fully dry/cure into the air.) Dry to the touch is not the same thing as cured. A fingernail scratch test will prove that. Generally after 48 hrs you can no longer just scratch it off easily.
#10
I would try the scratch test. And if it does not scratch off easily after 48 hrs, then yes, its fine to keep using it... assuming "keep using it" means you have more shutters to prime, yes. No reason to prime it twice unless your coverage was horrible on the first coat.