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Anyone had any luck painting their cabinets?

Posted on 2/3/25 at 10:59 am
Posted by theliontamer
Baton Rouge
Member since Nov 2015
1837 posts
Posted on 2/3/25 at 10:59 am
mine currently have old 1960s varnish, and 3 layers of paint. Stripped one and wasnt terrible. But, if I can just sand and prime/paint that would be ideal.
Posted by TU Rob
Birmingham
Member since Nov 2008
13319 posts
Posted on 2/3/25 at 11:07 am to
Sand it down, clean it really well after sanding, then use B-I-N Shellac Primer. My wife used to do this as a side job, and that worked with plenty of kitchen and bathroom cabinets.

Shellac Primer
Posted by theliontamer
Baton Rouge
Member since Nov 2015
1837 posts
Posted on 2/3/25 at 11:46 am to
light sanding? medium sanding?
Posted by WhiskeyThrottle
Weatherford Tx
Member since Nov 2017
6924 posts
Posted on 2/3/25 at 12:05 pm to
quote:

light sanding? medium sanding?


The quality of any paint job almost always comes down to the prep work. The more old paint you are able to sand off, the better the end product will be. A random orbital sander will help with a lot of it, but the parts that the orbital can't reach will require a little elbow grease.
Posted by idlewatcher
Planet Arium
Member since Jan 2012
92293 posts
Posted on 2/3/25 at 12:17 pm to
quote:

and 3 layers of paint.


Might want to try Citristrip. It works pretty good to get down to bare wood.
Posted by gumbo2176
Member since May 2018
19322 posts
Posted on 2/3/25 at 12:19 pm to
Kitchen cabinets, especially those near the oven and stove are going to have some grease on them no matter how much you clean them.

My first step would be to mix hot water with TSP (Tri-Sodium Phosphate) that you can get from any hardware or big box store.

Wipe the cabinets down with that to remove any grease from the surfaces and rinse with clean water when done.

Let the cabinets dry and then, like already mentioned, it's the prep work that makes a paint job look good. Prep well, make sure all the sanding dust is removed and then prime and paint and I suggest getting your prime half tinted to the finished color.

Ideally, spraying gives a really slick finish, but you can get good results using brushes, but they need to be good brushes, not the $5 off the shelf big box crap. I'm talking Purdy or Wooster brushes made for whatever type paint you plan to use-----oil or latex.
Posted by WarCamEagle
Member since Jun 2011
2227 posts
Posted on 2/3/25 at 1:12 pm to
Use 2 coats Sherwin Williams Emerald Urethane Trim Enamel , best decision I ever made
Posted by jmon
Loisiana
Member since Oct 2010
9897 posts
Posted on 2/3/25 at 2:29 pm to
quote:

if I can just sand and prime/paint that would be ideal.


Lol, yeah that is all it takes but we had 36 doors and drawer fronts. I spent 7 hours sanding and wife just as many hours primes and paint.

If you are spraying with an air gun, your paint time may be reduced. Don't forget to sand the primer!
Posted by bbvdd
Memphis, TN
Member since Jun 2009
28061 posts
Posted on 2/3/25 at 2:38 pm to
We painted ours several years ago.

Cleaned with TSP
Light sanding
General Finishes Milk paint
With a urethane top coat
HVLP sprayer

Still look new.
Posted by chryso
Baton Rouge
Member since Jul 2008
13515 posts
Posted on 2/3/25 at 3:46 pm to
We did our cabinets with the Rust-Oleum cabinet transformations kit and it came out great.
Posted by TigerKurt
Kenner, LA
Member since Apr 2005
1036 posts
Posted on 2/4/25 at 12:24 pm to
I painted mine white 3 years ago and they still look great. They were natural cherry wood previously.
I used a 4 inch micro fiber roller. I lightly sanded everything then applied 2 coats of primer & 3 coats of high quality woodwork paint. I removed all the doors and lined them up in an assembly line on my deck railing and on a large folding table in the garage and painted them one after another. I left the drawers in place and just pulled them out a little to paint them. The rest of the cabinet structure was easy to do. The biggest pain was all the taping.
This post was edited on 2/4/25 at 12:25 pm
Posted by tigerfoot
Alexandria
Member since Sep 2006
60638 posts
Posted on 2/5/25 at 9:24 pm to
As a young man I bought an old house. Terrible cabinets. I decided one night to start redoing them. It was a chore. It took me like a week a door then the frames. I have no advice as I had no tools to speak of, Just sanded them till my arms fell off.


Turned out nice though
Posted by sleepytime
Member since Feb 2014
3850 posts
Posted on 2/5/25 at 9:41 pm to
Make sure whatever paint you use meets KCMA standards. BIN primer usually will provide a good base on top of the old, check it to be sure though.
Posted by bigrunner
Hammond
Member since Nov 2023
11 posts
Posted on 2/7/25 at 1:26 pm to
I did this about 2 years ago, we were in the same circumstance. nice wood cabinets but old varnish.

A friend of mine recommended a process to me that worked. Lightly sanding the cabinets to smooth them out, certainly not all the way to bare wood, and then using a bonding primer and then a cabinet paint. It is still a process but it worked well and the paint wont scratch off even if you try.

Bonding Primer
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