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Painting internal masonary?   
Hi All,

A mate has been letting me store some car parts in his side workshop
and in return I'd like to give it a tidy up for him.

The main inner / deviding wall is fairly clean / dry render so I was
looking at (smooth)  masionary paint in the sheds today.  (There are
also a couple of (probably) solid brick external walls but they didn't
look damp and again are fairly clean (and I'm painting the idside of
them)).

But then I thought about emulsion . . you can paint that straight onto
internal brickwork / plaster in a house can't you so why not an
internal garage wall ..?

So, 10L of emulsion for 9 or 10L of (external?[1]) masionary paint
for 19 please?

All the best ..

T i m

[1] I couldn't seem to see 'Internal' maisonary paint or is that
'emulsion' ..?

p.s.  For the total amount the paint will cost either way, the 'best'
way would be prefered over the cheapest please?
Date:Mon, 12 Sep 2005 18:26:42 GMT   Author:  

Re: Painting internal masonary?   

>
> [1] I couldn't seem to see 'Internal' maisonary paint or is that
> 'emulsion' ..?


Try 'Masonry' paint. We're not Fr*nch.

Mary
Date:Mon, 12 Sep 2005 19:39:39 +0100   Author:  

Re: Painting internal masonary?   
Mary Fisher wrote:

>> [1] I couldn't seem to see 'Internal' maisonary paint or is that
>> 'emulsion' ..?
>
> Try 'Masonry' paint. We're not Fr*nch.


Speak for yourself, Rosbif....  :o)
Date:Mon, 12 Sep 2005 21:20:09 +0100   Author:  

Re: Painting internal masonary?   
On Mon, 12 Sep 2005 21:20:09 +0100, "Steve Walker"
 wrote:


>Mary Fisher wrote:
>>> [1] I couldn't seem to see 'Internal' maisonary paint or is that
>>> 'emulsion' ..?
>>
>> Try 'Masonry' paint. We're not Fr*nch.
>
>Speak for yourself, Rosbif....  :o) 


Yeah .. that told her!

And how does she know what maisonary is (she probably thinks I'm
talking about walls ..<scheech>) ;-)

It wasn't even made by bees!

T i m
Date:Mon, 12 Sep 2005 21:28:36 GMT   Author:  

Re: Painting internal masonary?   
T i m wrote:


> The main inner / deviding wall is fairly clean / dry render so I was
> looking at (smooth)  masionary paint in the sheds today.  (There are
> also a couple of (probably) solid brick external walls but they didn't
> look damp and again are fairly clean (and I'm painting the idside of
> them)).
> 
> But then I thought about emulsion . . you can paint that straight onto
> internal brickwork / plaster in a house can't you so why not an
> internal garage wall ..?
> 
> So, 10L of emulsion for 9 or 10L of (external?[1]) masionary paint
> for 19 please?


Personally I would go for a masonry paint, like the Layland Pliolite ones:

http://www.leyland-paints.co.uk/site/ourProducts.asp?range=10

It will paint over most surfaces, and is a little more tolerant should 
the wall get damp at any point.

-- 
Cheers,

John.

/=================================================================\
|          Internode Ltd -  http://www.internode.co.uk            |
|-----------------------------------------------------------------|
|        John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk              |
\=================================================================/
Date:Tue, 13 Sep 2005 00:13:31 +0100   Author:  

Re: Painting internal masonary?   
On Tue, 13 Sep 2005 00:13:31 +0100, John Rumm
 wrote:



>> So, 10L of emulsion for 9 or 10L of (external?[1]) masionary paint
>> for 19 please?
>
>Personally I would go for a masonry paint, like the Layland Pliolite ones:
>
>http://www.leyland-paints.co.uk/site/ourProducts.asp?range=10
>
>It will paint over most surfaces, and is a little more tolerant should 
>the wall get damp at any point.


Ah, thanks for that John.

I have used Leyland floor paint in my workshop and it is good stuff.

All the best .. ;-)

T i m
Date:Tue, 13 Sep 2005 06:26:02 GMT   Author:  

Re: Painting internal masonary?   
T i m wrote:

> So, 10L of emulsion for 9


No! Don't buy this paint, it's likely to be absolute rubbish -
"I have done this [A.S.->]".



> or 10L of (external?[1]) masionary paint for 19 please?


That sounds better.... you do, to a large degree, get what
you pay for. The very cheap stuff is likely to have very
poor coverage, and it may not adhere well. If you put crap
on his wall, and it shortly looks as if it's developed a
really bad case of eczema, you won't be popular!
Date:Tue, 13 Sep 2005 09:14:16 +0100   Author:  

Re: Painting internal masonary?   
"T i m"  wrote in message 
news:tgsbi195r6fumhmt63lvus35d0uj05kjam@4ax.com...

> On Mon, 12 Sep 2005 21:20:09 +0100, "Steve Walker"
>  wrote:
>
>>Mary Fisher wrote:
>>>> [1] I couldn't seem to see 'Internal' maisonary paint or is that
>>>> 'emulsion' ..?
>>>
>>> Try 'Masonry' paint. We're not Fr*nch.
>>
>>Speak for yourself, Rosbif....  :o)
>
> Yeah .. that told her!

Yeah!

?
>
> And how does she know what maisonary is (she probably thinks I'm
> talking about walls ..<scheech>) ;-)
>
> It wasn't even made by bees!


No, it's a brick wall - you described it extremely well in your original 
post :-)

Memory going? It happens to the best of us!

Mary

>
> T i m 
Date:Tue, 13 Sep 2005 10:49:34 +0100   Author:  

Re: Painting internal masonary?   
On Tue, 13 Sep 2005 09:14:16 +0100, Chris Bacon 
wrote:


>T i m wrote:
>> So, 10L of emulsion for 9
>
>No! Don't buy this paint, it's likely to be absolute rubbish -
>"I have done this [A.S.->]".


Ah, ok .. ;-)

>
>
>> or 10L of (external?[1]) masionary paint for 19 please?
>
>That sounds better.... you do, to a large degree, get what
>you pay for. The very cheap stuff is likely to have very
>poor coverage, and it may not adhere well. If you put crap
>on his wall, and it shortly looks as if it's developed a
>really bad case of eczema, you won't be popular!


Ideed not .. and why I (and he even though he's paying for it) would
choose a 'good' over 'cheap' solution.

I just wanted to make sure I wasn't missing anything .. you know ..
"why did you waste your money using that when emulsion is all you
needed" sorta thing ..? (especially as I couldn't see anything marked
as 'Internal Masonary paint' ?)

Thanks for the input ..

All the best ..

T i m
Date:Tue, 13 Sep 2005 10:24:03 GMT   Author:  

Re: Painting internal masonary?   
On Tue, 13 Sep 2005 10:49:34 +0100, "Mary Fisher"
 wrote:




>No, it's a brick wall - you described it extremely well in your original 
>post :-)


I mentioned no post?

>
>Memory going? It happens to the best of us!


It is? It does?

Where am I ... ?
Date:Tue, 13 Sep 2005 10:26:21 GMT   Author:  

Re: Painting internal masonary?   
"T i m"  wrote in message 
news:8cadi1po3e24dbkhv85geva9rcju296dum@4ax.com...

> On Tue, 13 Sep 2005 10:49:34 +0100, "Mary Fisher"
>  wrote:
>
>
>
>>No, it's a brick wall - you described it extremely well in your original
>>post :-)
>
> I mentioned no post?
>>
>>Memory going? It happens to the best of us!
>
> It is? It does?
>
> Where am I ... ?


Thursday

Mary
I think ...

>
> 
Date:Tue, 13 Sep 2005 11:48:27 +0100   Author:  

Re: Painting internal masonary?   
"T i m"  wrote in message 
news:55adi1132ja3bhv52i76is0qua5o1dv4fa@4ax.com...

>
> ...  (especially as I couldn't see anything marked
> as 'Internal Masonary paint' ?)


Not surprised!

:-)

Mary
Date:Tue, 13 Sep 2005 11:49:33 +0100   Author:  

Re: Painting internal masonary?   
John Rumm wrote:

> T i m wrote:
> 
>> But then I thought about emulsion . . you can paint that straight onto
>> internal brickwork / plaster in a house can't you so why not an
>> internal garage wall ..?

> Personally I would go for a masonry paint, like the Layland Pliolite ones:
> 
> http://www.leyland-paints.co.uk/site/ourProducts.asp?range=10


Isn't there some reason why you shouldn't use external masonry paint 
indoors (although whether a garage/workshop consitutes indoors is maybe 
a moot point!)?  Was it something to do with added fungicides or 
solvents maybe?

David
Date:Tue, 13 Sep 2005 16:45:41 GMT   Author:  

Re: Painting internal masonary?   
"Lobster"  wrote in message 
news:VmDVe.171$1A.69@newsfe1-gui.ntli.net...

> John Rumm wrote:
>> T i m wrote:
>>
>>> But then I thought about emulsion . . you can paint that straight onto
>>> internal brickwork / plaster in a house can't you so why not an
>>> internal garage wall ..?
>
> Isn't there some reason why you shouldn't use external masonry paint 
> indoors (although whether a garage/workshop consitutes indoors is maybe a 
> moot point!)?  Was it something to do with added fungicides or solvents 
> maybe?


<Fffffffffffffff ... sucks teeth>

You're just confusing the lad now!

Mary
Date:Tue, 13 Sep 2005 20:47:44 +0100   Author: