Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

Painting a Bathtub?

1 view
Skip to first unread message

Suzie-Q

unread,
Apr 9, 2004, 11:09:47 PM4/9/04
to
I have a porcelain bathtub that is as old as my house, which was
built in 1962. The bathtub looks awful and I'd like to do something
to improve the appearance. Most of the surface on the inside has
been worn down to the point of being rough (the shiny surface has
been worn off).

The key point I'd like you to consider is that this bathtub is never,
ever used due to plumbing problems that I can't afford to fix
right now. Eventually, I will have the whole bathroom redone, but
not soon. The most I will ever do with this bathtub is pour a
bucket of water down the drain.

Is there some clever way to improve the appearance of the inside
of the tub - even something you might not normally use to
"refinish" a bathtub (like cement paint or the stuff you put on
basement walls to keep the moisture out)?

Put your thinking caps on and see if you can come up with
something I might try.

Again, this is an unused bathtub. No kids bathing or anything.

Thanks in advance,
--
8^)~~~ Sue (remove the x to e-mail)
~~~~~~
"I reserve the absolute right to be smarter
today than I was yesterday." -Adlai Stevenson

http://home.earthlink.net/~sme617

w...@tidewater.net

unread,
Apr 10, 2004, 2:54:47 AM4/10/04
to
Home depot has a tub paint for about 25.00..... not too bad.
Follow the directions and your tub will look great. It does take some work.
good luck.
w

Joseph Meehan

unread,
Apr 10, 2004, 8:11:18 AM4/10/04
to
If you are considering keeping this tub and want it to look good later,
I suggest not doing anything now and wait until you can afford a few $$ and
have it refinished professionally. Doing something now is likely to
increase the price of doing it right later.

--
Joseph E. Meehan

26 + 6 = 1 It's Irish Math

Suzie-Q

unread,
Apr 10, 2004, 9:53:54 AM4/10/04
to
No, I don't plan on keeping it. I will replace it with a fiberglass (?)
tub.

Sue (remove the x to e-mail)
~~~~~~

In article <GvRdc.2714$T86....@fe2.columbus.rr.com>,

Joseph Meehan

unread,
Apr 10, 2004, 10:20:08 AM4/10/04
to
Suzie-Q wrote:
> No, I don't plan on keeping it. I will replace it with a fiberglass
> (?) tub.
>
> Sue (remove the x to e-mail)
> ~~~~~~
>
> In article <GvRdc.2714$T86....@fe2.columbus.rr.com>,
> "Joseph Meehan" <sligojo...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>> If you are considering keeping this tub and want it to look good
>> later, I suggest not doing anything now and wait until you can
>> afford a few $$ and have it refinished professionally. Doing
>> something now is likely to increase the price of doing it right
>> later.
>>


Then I suggest using one of the available products designed for just
that. You should be able to find several choices are various paint and DIY
stores.

barry martin

unread,
Apr 12, 2004, 10:03:10 AM4/12/04
to
Hi Sue!

S > I have a porcelain bathtub that is as old as my house, which was
S > built in 1962. The bathtub looks awful and I'd like to do something
S > to improve the appearance. Most of the surface on the inside has
S > been worn down to the point of being rough (the shiny surface has
S > been worn off).

Seems like it should have lasted a lot longer than that! This house
was built in 1940-something and the (original) bathtub was just
starting to look worn on the inside bottom surface (the one one stands
one/lays on).

S > The key point I'd like you to consider is that this bathtub is never,
S > ever used due to plumbing problems that I can't afford to fix
S > right now. Eventually, I will have the whole bathroom redone, but
S > not soon. The most I will ever do with this bathtub is pour a
S > bucket of water down the drain.

If this pour-a-bucket-of-water is to keep the drain trap full try
vegetable oil -- won't evaporate.


S > Is there some clever way to improve the appearance of the inside
S > of the tub - even something you might not normally use to
S > "refinish" a bathtub (like cement paint or the stuff you put on
S > basement walls to keep the moisture out)?

As the tub is never used (other than possible water disposal - depends
on bucket of water response) possibly just clean the surface real good
with some sort of a mild acid, rinse thoroughly, let dry, then spray
paint. Mask off the chrome plumbing: drain, overflow/drain lever. As
you never use the tub you won't be subjecting the spray-painted
surface to wear so I'm thinking the spray paint would be satisfactory,
though I would probably use something like Rustoleum or an appliance
paint as would adhere better.

You could even get a bit creative and two-tone your tub: original
colour on the outside, maybe top depending on the condition, new
contrasting colour on the inside.

Another possibility would be to turn the tub into something different
like an aquarium. Cover the bottom with gravel, let the fishies swim
around! Or maybe an overgrown flower pot -- maybe a Bonzai garden.


-
¯ barry.martinşATşthesafebbs.zeppole.com ®

* "My first sexual experience was on a farm," said Tom sheepishly.
---
ş RoseReader 2.52á P003186
ş The Safe BBS ş Bettendorf, IA 563-359-1971
---
ş RIMEGate(tm)/RGXMod V1.13 at BBSWORLD * In...@bbsworld.com

0 new messages