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Alias Born 07/05/2009

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Re: User-65225 post# 129355

Wednesday, 05/12/2010 11:18:29 PM

Wednesday, May 12, 2010 11:18:29 PM

Post# of 241509

Not with nail polish, no laytex paint, which one did they choose? The hot pink quart I had stashed in the master bedroom closet. I usually keep my touch up paint there. I know what you must be thinking and the paint was given to me by my MIL and was a maybe to use as an accent color only in the kids room. Did I mention both are girls. Long story short they brought the can down the stairs and oops spilled it on the last 5 steps and continued to spill it onto my front hallway onto the laminate flooring. Oh and it was also fun to ride a couple of cars through it on the floor while it was there messy!



No problem, I can tell you what cleans up latex - not laytex(sp). Pretty simple, and it certainly isn't toxic. It's called soap and water. You don't need anything special. Oil paint is a little different, not quite as easy to deal with. After some testing of my own and consultation with a professional painting friend of mine, winning colours doesn't seem to be a winner after all. While winning colours will in fact clean a brush used for painting with oil-based product it certainly is not his preferable method. It simply takes way too long to clean a bruch with winning colours and furthermore takes too much product to do the job. It is first and foremost not cost effective for a pro painter to take 20+ minutes to clean a brush. I personally will stick to a small amount of polycleanse - simply cause it works quickly. My pro painter friend will have nothing to do with either - he simply throws out his brushes and buys new after every job. More cost effective for him. He can paint more in 10 minutes than the cleaning of even the most expensive of brushes adds to his bottom line.


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