disco_monkey79
Established Member
- Joined
- 5 Oct 2009
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- 681
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Hi
We want to freshen up the kitchen, but on a very small budget. The kitchen cabinet doors are timber and we'd like to paint them.
However, they're got lots of fiddly edges etc, and I was wondering if blasting them would be the quickest and easist way of prepping them for paint.
Has anyone had any experience/success/dismal failiure in doing this? I don't mind if there's a little light pitting as a result, that can either be addressed afterwards, or left as-is for the "rustic" look ;-)
Also, if someone can recommend a particular media, what sort of mask is required? A super-fandangled air-fed one, or a simple (good-quality) filter mask?
I've read that soda blasting is the least damaging (to the item being blasted), but it looks like this involves more kit than, say, a blasting gun using aluminium oxide grit. I have a compressor, but the less new kit needed the better (remember the budget!).
Thanks
We want to freshen up the kitchen, but on a very small budget. The kitchen cabinet doors are timber and we'd like to paint them.
However, they're got lots of fiddly edges etc, and I was wondering if blasting them would be the quickest and easist way of prepping them for paint.
Has anyone had any experience/success/dismal failiure in doing this? I don't mind if there's a little light pitting as a result, that can either be addressed afterwards, or left as-is for the "rustic" look ;-)
Also, if someone can recommend a particular media, what sort of mask is required? A super-fandangled air-fed one, or a simple (good-quality) filter mask?
I've read that soda blasting is the least damaging (to the item being blasted), but it looks like this involves more kit than, say, a blasting gun using aluminium oxide grit. I have a compressor, but the less new kit needed the better (remember the budget!).
Thanks