Also, is there anything better than a small brush for this type of
task? Any special tool that is better than a brush for painting
pipes?
Thanks.
Steve
lex...@pacbell.ent
Knitting needle and a hair curler sponge. My son just found a web site that
has a list of tips for painting.
http://tips.tipking.com/handyman/perfect_painting.shtml
--
Mike D.
Remove .spamnot to respond by email
> Thanks.
>
> Steve
> lex...@pacbell.ent
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"hollywood_steve" <s...@soca.com> wrote in message
news:55147cb4.04021...@posting.google.com...
I have used a replacement pad for a paint pad. It works easy and fast.
--
Joseph E. Meehan
26 + 6 = 1 It's Irish Math
Got some tin foil or heavy plastic? Masking tape? Tape something
impervious to the wall with masking tape. Get a small foam roller at
HD, bring it home, dip it in paint, and roll. When the paint is dry,
take down the mask.
<nor...@earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:40314728...@earthlink.net...
I ended up using the pad from a ceiling edge tool. (the thing with
the two wheels that you use to cut in along ceilings) The replacement
pads for these things are flexible and when I put it in the palm of my
hand I was able to make it conform to the shape of the pipe. The 8FT
pipe took about 3 minutes!
For masking the wall behind the pipe, I used the masking tape that has
2FT of very thin plastic sheeting attached. The plastic is so thin
that it hugged the wall, maybe by static electricity. I stuck the
tape to the ceiling grid along the wall and the plastic hung down 2FT.
I then repeated the process 3 times, each time attaching to the
bottom of the level above. 4 strips reached the floor. Because the
tape was stuck to the ceiling grid, not the wall, I could leave it on
until the pipe was completely dry without worrying about the tape
pulling up any paint.
Thanks for all of the suggestions!
Steve
lex...@pacbell.net