How to Choose the Safest Paint
Painting With
Environmentally Friendly Paint
Introduction:
As DIY homeowners you
frequently get involved with painting your house,
both inside and outside. It may be just a touch up
paint task or you may be painting the entire house
exterior or paint a room in the house. Although
these tasks are not difficult DIY home improvement
projects they can be a little hazardous because the
paint that is available on the market today is a
chemical hodgepodge of different chemicals.
The following information is
to assist you in how to choose the safest paint for
your paint project.
Paint contains thinners (know
as solvents) that release volatile organic
compounds into the air as they evaporate in the
drying action. These contribute to a risky
environment and can pose health risks.
Modern oil-based paints that
are made with synthetic resins are called alkyd
paints. They have less thinner and give off fewer
odors and toxic fumes than oil-based paints.
Thinners are an essential component of alkyd paint
too.
Because the thinners in latex
paint have always been much less than that in alkyd
paint most DIY homeowners prefer using latex paint.
Because of the hazards associated with oil-based
paint some states have restricted the use or made
them illegal in certain areas of the country. In
many states the low solvent content of latex
paints, about 8 percent, has been reduced to zero
in some.
These low solvent paints are
identified as “0VOC” paint. OVOC is an abbreviation
for “zero volatile organic compounds”. This is good
news for the environmental friendly homeowner. The
only drawback is that 0VOC paint is difficult to
work with because it dries very quickly.
OVOC is great house paint
because of its environmentally friendly
characteristics and it dries in less than thirty
minutes in most cases. Although you may have to
work a little more quickly with it and clean your
paint brush more often, it is the best house paint
on the market today.
Related articles:
How to Paint
Trim
How
to Paint a Garage Door
How to Remove Deck Stains
How to Roll Paint on a Wall