I'm doing the estimate on my first interior where the people are smokers. They want their ceiling and walls painted.
They have a knockdown ceiling that's never been painted that also has some fireplace smoke stains. The walls don't have any really noticeable stains, but I just want good adhesion to the existing paint. In either case, I don't care about blocking smells because they'll just smell bad again in no time.
Here's the advice I've been given on how to tackle this:
Regarding knockdown ceiling:
Source 1 - Just use alkyd paint. That will get rid of all the stains, no problem, and the ceilings will be pure white.
Source 2 - If you follow Source 1's advice, the stains will bleed through in six months. Use a stain-blocking primer (oil or latex) then an alkyd top coat.
Regarding the walls:
Source 1 - Use a stain-blocking primer (didn't specify latex or alkyd), then apply your top-coat.
Source 2 - Forget the primer! Just wash the walls well then apply your top coats.
So at the risk of me getting even more confused, what advice would YOU suggest for each situation?
They have a knockdown ceiling that's never been painted that also has some fireplace smoke stains. The walls don't have any really noticeable stains, but I just want good adhesion to the existing paint. In either case, I don't care about blocking smells because they'll just smell bad again in no time.
Here's the advice I've been given on how to tackle this:
Regarding knockdown ceiling:
Source 1 - Just use alkyd paint. That will get rid of all the stains, no problem, and the ceilings will be pure white.
Source 2 - If you follow Source 1's advice, the stains will bleed through in six months. Use a stain-blocking primer (oil or latex) then an alkyd top coat.
Regarding the walls:
Source 1 - Use a stain-blocking primer (didn't specify latex or alkyd), then apply your top-coat.
Source 2 - Forget the primer! Just wash the walls well then apply your top coats.
So at the risk of me getting even more confused, what advice would YOU suggest for each situation?