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Clean the b.b. first with soap and water. If the b.b. have been painted already , you can directly paint over them. If the surface is very glossy you can use Gripper a superb primer from Glidden. If they are coated with p.u. or stain use Gripper. Felix Handyman
Yes, you can.
Kilz is an economical consumer grade stain killing primer. It is designed to be sold in home centers at a low price. For harder to cover stains, a more expensive, higher quality stain kill primer should be used.
I've been told the stain is better as it wont chip
Minwax stains are made to go directly onto wood. You do not need primer, and I think it looks awful over primer.
Clean the b.b. first with soap and water. If the b.b. have been painted already , you can directly paint over them. If the surface is very glossy you can use Gripper a superb primer from Glidden. If they are coated with p.u. or stain use Gripper. Felix Handyman
Yes, you can.
Kilz is an economical consumer grade stain killing primer. It is designed to be sold in home centers at a low price. For harder to cover stains, a more expensive, higher quality stain kill primer should be used.
My uncle is a painter and he said you will probably have to repaint ceiling but first user a Kilz primer to cover the oily stain then paint ceiling.
NO ! - woodstain does not use a primer.
Latex.
I've been told the stain is better as it wont chip
Minwax stains are made to go directly onto wood. You do not need primer, and I think it looks awful over primer.
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Absolutly! You just have to check to see if the primer is first an exterior primer and if it will stick to glossy surfaces. You can lightly sand to rough up the surface or just clean the surface and apply the primer. For oil based primers I would recommend Beauti-tone's fast dry oil primer or Zinsser's oil based cover stain primer.
Only if you put on a good primer first.
If the door has a primer or a paint on it then no. Stain needs open grain to work. Stain seeps into the pores of the wood. If there is a coating, i.e. the primer or paint, then the stain will have nowhere to go. It will just sit on top of the coating until it is wiped off or dries in ugly blotches.