Paint Brush Rescue



Paint brush rescue products

Klean-Strip® Paint Brush Rescue cleans wet or dried latex paint and dried oil-based paints from paint brushes. Simply add water to the bag and in one step, it restores your paint brushes to new.

Paint

Soak in TSP Trisodium Phosphate (aka TSP) is great for cleaning your furniture AND your. Clean after every use. If you aren't washing your paint brushes every time you use them, Wilhelm. First the right handlebar grip has been worn down a bit, as every time the bike is folded it brushes the ground. Honestly though the stock grips are crap and I would reccommend changing them out at some point anyway. Also the paint on the top of the bike rack is scuffed due to the fact that when the bike is folded, the rack comes into contact. Paint brushes for house painting typically come in sizes ranging from one to six inches. Generally speaking, the tighter the area you’re painting, the smaller the brush should be. ® Paint Brush Rescue cleans wet latex paint, dried latex paint, dried oil-based paints, and shellac from paint brushes. ® DIRECTIONS FOR USE: 1. Add water up to FILL LINE of bag and stir until dissolved (about 1 pint). To clean brush, soak overnight. To restore a dried brush, soak for 24 to 48 hours or until paint has loosened from the brush.

BrushTool

1. Add water up to FILL LINE of bag and stir until dissolved (about 1 pint).
2. To clean brush, soak overnight. To restore a dried brush, soak for 24 to 48 hours or until paint has loosened from the brush.
3. Use an old metal fork or paint brush comb to remove paint from bristles, rinsing paint brush in the Paint Brush Rescue as needed.
4. After paint has been removed, rinse paint brush with warm water, shake out excess water and hang brush to dry.

WARNING: CONTAINS SODIUM METASILICATE AND SODIUM HYDROXIDE. Avoid contact with eyes and prolonged contact with skin. Do not ingest.

Paint Brush Rescue Tool

Paint brush rescue products

FIRST AID: IF SWALLOWED, immediately call your poison control center, hospital emergency room or physician for instructions. IN CASE OF EYE CONTACT, immediately flush with water, remove any contact lens, continue flushing with water for at least 15 minutes, then get immediate medical attention. IN CASE OF SKIN CONTACT, immediately wash with soap and water. If irritation persists, get medical attention.

Paint Brush Rescue Videos

KEEP OUT OF REACH OF CHILDREN.

EKBC12 Paint Brush Rescue

This is a messy way to go. You need a thinner bucket. I don't understand why commercial painters love to fling thinner around, it's a toxin and a fire hazard. Anything you aerosolize, you breathe.

Not being snarky - being concerned for your health. And your pocket book. I get that.

I was trained to clean those brushes after the day by wiping them out, giving a good rinse in a thinner bucket to knock off any solids, and shampooing with Murphy's. Every Day After Painting. There's no reason for a brush to get to this state. The next morning, it's dry and clean and ready to go. You can also knock off any cruddy build up through the day in a thinner bucket. Which is a zinc or steel bucket, with a lid, with a grate inside to run the bristles over. Paint solids fall to the bottom and the thinner can be used until it's exhausted. No breathing micro droplets, none on the skin, and the fire hazard stays contained. Yes, paint thinner is a fire hazard. It comes from the same cracking tower as motor oil and gasoline, it's very dirty stuff. It often contains lead and other nasty things too. You don't want to breathe it.

Paint Brush Rescue Products

You can also give most brushes a 72 hour soak in Murphys as a maintenance deep clean. Every six months or so. This can also rescue brushes you've already trashed. No scraping or grinding needed if you clean up every day though. That's time out of your life. Go watch a game! The five minutes to wash brushes is worth having a clean dry well conditioned tool at hand the next morning. But a Saturday afternoon? Nah.

Paint Brush Rescue Kit

I'm trained as a portrait painter, but I renovate houses too. And I have a brush fetish, I have over a thousand high quality ones. I clean them all the same way, studio or house. They're all in great shape. Washing daily is not a problem, the oil in oil soap is a great conditioner for natural hairs. Just let them air dry out in the open, they could mildew in a closed container. Takes them inside in freezing weather. Love them and they'll love you back.