title: Painter
slug: painter
aliases:
  - painter and decorator
  - coatings applicator
  - house painter
category: Skilled Trades
tags:
  - coatings
  - surface-prep
  - adhesion
  - finishing
  - construction
difficulty: intermediate
summary: >-
  How a master painter thinks in coating systems and adhesion, wins the job in
  the prep nobody sees, and hits a target film thickness rather than a color.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: carpenter
    type: collaboration
    note: builds and installs the trim and doors the painter finishes
  - slug: mason
    type: adjacent
    note: masonry and its sealers share the exterior envelope
  - slug: interior-designer
    type: collaboration
    note: specifies the color and sheen the painter realizes
  - slug: roofer
    type: adjacent
    note: both fight water and UV on the building envelope
  - slug: chemist
    type: related
    note: coating cure, adhesion, and film chemistry are applied surface chemistry
specializations:
  - residential repaint
  - commercial/industrial coatings
  - automotive/refinish painter
  - decorative and faux finisher
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: 'SSPC: The Society for Protective Coatings standards'
    kind: standard
  - title: Painting and Decorating Craftsman's Manual (PDCA)
    kind: book
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      Paint is the thinnest layer on a building and the first thing anyone sees
      and the

      first thing to fail. A painter exists to protect surfaces from water,
      ultraviolet

      light, and abrasion, and to make them look intentional — and those two
      jobs are

      the same job, because a coating that fails to protect peels, and a coating
      that

      peels looks terrible. The craft is widely dismissed as "anybody can roll a
      wall,"

      and that contempt is exactly why most paint fails early: the finish coat
      is easy,

      and almost the entire outcome is decided before the first drop of color,
      in the

      preparation nobody can see once the job is done.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Get the right coating to bond to a properly prepared surface at the
      correct film

      thickness, so it protects and looks the way it should for as long as the
      system

      is rated — and so the failure, when it eventually comes, is the coating
      wearing

      out, not letting go.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      Assessing the substrate and the existing coating; preparing the surface by

      washing, scraping, sanding, filling, and priming; masking and protecting

      everything that isn't getting painted; choosing the coating system for the

      substrate and exposure; and applying primer and finish at the right
      thickness by

      brush, roller, or spray under the right conditions of temperature and
      humidity.

      Beneath the visible color is a chemist's discipline about adhesion, cure,
      and

      film build, and a project manager's discipline about sequence and dry
      times,

      because a painter who rushes recoat windows traps solvent and ruins the
      cure.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **The job is the prep; the paint is the reward.** Eighty percent of the
      labor
        and ninety percent of the durability live in the preparation. Anyone can apply
        the finish coat; the master made it last by what they did first.
      - **Adhesion is everything.** Paint sticks to a clean, sound, profiled
      surface
        and to nothing else. Grease, chalk, gloss, dust, and moisture are all bond
        breakers.
      - **Film build is a number, not a feeling.** Coatings are engineered to
      protect
        at a specified dry film thickness. Too thin and they fail early; too thick and
        they crack, sag, or never cure.
      - **Right product for the substrate and the exposure.** Latex over oil,
      oil over
        galvanized, the wrong primer over masonry — each is a delamination on a timer.
      - **Respect the recoat window and the dew point.** Paint applied too cold,
      too
        hot, too humid, or recoated too soon or too late fails in ways that look like
        bad product but are bad timing.
      - **Cut clean and lay it off.** A crisp line and an even film are the
      difference
        between a coat of paint and a finish.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **The coating system as a stack.** Substrate, primer, and topcoat are
      one
        engineered system, not three independent layers. The primer's job is to bond to
        the substrate and present a surface the topcoat can grip; mismatch any layer and
        the whole stack fails.
      - **Adhesion = mechanical tooth + chemical bond + cleanliness.** You
      either etch
        a profile for the paint to key into, choose a primer that chemically bonds, or
        both — and none of it works over contamination.
      - **Wet film vs. dry film.** What you apply (wet) shrinks as solvent or
      water
        leaves to a fraction of the thickness (dry). Painters gauge wet film to hit a
        target dry film, because dry film is what protects.
      - **The dew point trap.** When the surface is colder than the dew point,
      moisture
        condenses on it invisibly; paint over that and it blisters. Always paint above
        the dew point and within the product's temperature band.
      - **Chalking and the chalk test.** Old exterior latex degrades to a
      powdery
        surface that no new coat can grip until it's washed and bound. Rub it; if your
        hand comes away chalky, it needs more than a topcoat.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - A coating protects only as long as it stays bonded; adhesion failure is
      the
        root of nearly every premature paint failure.
      - Film thickness, not color, determines protection; the same gallon spread
      thin
        protects half as long.
      - Cure is a chemical reaction, not just drying; temperature and time
      govern it,
        and you cannot rush it.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - What is the substrate, and what's already on it — and will the new coat
      bond to
        it?
      - Is the surface clean, dull, dry, and sound, or am I painting over a bond
        breaker?
      - What's the dew point and the surface temperature right now?

      - What dry film thickness does this system call for, and how many coats
      gets me
        there?
      - What's the recoat window — can I get the next coat on in time, or have I
      missed
        it?
      - Is this failure the product, the prep, or the conditions?

      - What am I masking, and what will overspray or a drip ruin if I don't?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **Spot-prime vs. prime everything.** Sound, previously painted,
      same-product
        surfaces get spot priming on repairs; bare wood, stains, tannin-bleeders,
        glossy or chalky surfaces, and substrate changes get a full bonding or stain-
        blocking primer.
      - **Brush vs. roller vs. spray.** Spray for speed and a glass finish on
      large or
        intricate surfaces (with backrolling for penetration on porous substrates);
        roller for walls; brush for cut lines and detail. Spray is fastest and the
        least forgiving of poor masking.
      - **Latex vs. oil/alkyd vs. specialty.** Acrylic latex for most exterior
      and
        interior walls (flexible, breathable, UV-stable); alkyd where hardness and
        leveling matter (trim, doors); epoxy or urethane for floors and high-wear;
        elastomeric for hairline-cracked masonry.
      - **Repair vs. strip.** Sound, well-adhered old paint gets scuff-sanded
      and
        recoated; widespread peeling, alligatoring, or incompatible coatings get
        stripped to a sound layer or the substrate.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      1. **Assess.** Identify substrate, existing coating, failures, moisture,
      and
         exposure. Run the chalk and adhesion tests outside; check for lead on
         pre-1978 work.
      2. **Protect and mask.** Cover floors, fixtures, glass, and plants; tape
      clean
         lines; set up containment for dust or overspray.
      3. **Prepare.** Wash off dirt and chalk, scrape and sand loose paint,
      feather
         edges, fill and caulk, sand smooth, dust off, and spot- or full-prime.
      4. **Prime.** Apply the bonding or stain-blocking primer the substrate
      needs and
         let it cure to its recoat window.
      5. **Apply finish.** First topcoat at target film thickness, in the right
         conditions; lay it off in one direction; respect dry time.
      6. **Second coat and detail.** Recoat for full film build and color; cut
      crisp
         lines; check for holidays, runs, and lap marks in raking light.
      7. **Clean up and inspect.** Pull tape while the line is still flexible,
      clean
         tools, and walk the job under good light for misses.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Speed vs. prep.** Skipping the wash and sand wins a day and loses
      three
        years of service life. The fastest job is the one you don't have to redo.
      - **One thick coat vs. two thin ones.** One heavy pass sags and cures
      poorly; two
        proper coats build film evenly and bond to each other. Always two.
      - **Spray speed vs. masking time.** Spraying is fast but the time saved is
      spent
        masking and cleaning overspray; on a tight, furnished space, the roller is
        often faster overall.
      - **Color match vs. coverage.** Deep and bright colors with weak hide need
      more
        coats over a tinted primer; quoting a deep red as two coats over white is a
        money-loser.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - If it's glossy, dull it; paint won't grip a slick surface.

      - Two thin coats always beat one thick one.

      - Don't paint below the product's minimum temperature or within 5°F of the
      dew
        point.
      - Box your paint (mix all the gallons together) so the color is consistent
      wall
        to wall.
      - Cut in first, then roll into the wet edge before it sets, to avoid
      hatbanding.

      - Pull tape before the paint fully cures or it'll peel the line with it.

      - Caulk after primer, paint after caulk; primer makes the caulk and the
      wall
        read the same.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **Peeling and delamination** — painting over dirt, gloss, chalk, or
      moisture,
        the cardinal sins of adhesion.
      - **Blistering** — moisture or solvent trapped under the film, often from
        painting a damp or sun-hot surface.
      - **Alligatoring and cracking** — too-thick film or an incompatible hard
      coat over
        a flexible one.
      - **Lap marks and hatbanding** — letting the wet edge set before rolling
      into it,
        or a different sheen where the brush met the roller.
      - **Flashing (uneven sheen)** — painting over inconsistent porosity
      without
        priming, so the substrate drinks the binder unevenly.
      - **Runs and sags** — too much material applied too fast, especially on
      trim and
        doors.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **"It'll cover" with one coat** of deep color over a contrasting base.

      - **Painting over peeling paint** without scraping back to a sound edge.

      - **Skipping primer on bare wood** and watching tannin or knots bleed
      through.

      - **Caulking before priming**, so the caulk and bare substrate cure
      differently
        and telegraph.
      - **Spraying without backrolling** on porous siding, leaving paint sitting
      on top
        instead of keyed in.
      - **Ignoring lead** on a pre-1978 repaint, creating a dust hazard and a
      legal
        problem.
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **Substrate** — the surface being painted; its nature dictates the
      entire
        system.
      - **Film build / dry film thickness (DFT)** — the cured coating thickness,
      the
        number that determines protection.
      - **Cut in** — brushing a clean edge along trim, corners, and ceilings
      before
        rolling the field.
      - **Holiday** — a missed spot or thin area in the film.

      - **Hatbanding** — a visible frame around the wall where brushwork meets
      roller
        work in different sheen.
      - **Flashing** — uneven gloss caused by uneven substrate porosity.

      - **Chalking** — the powdery surface of weathered exterior paint that
      breaks
        adhesion.
      - **Sheen** — the gloss level (flat, eggshell, satin, semi-gloss, gloss);
      higher
        sheen is harder, more washable, and shows defects more.
      - **Lay off** — the final light strokes in one direction to even the film
      and
        remove brush marks.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      Brushes (a good cut-in sash brush is a personal instrument), roller frames
      and

      the right nap for the texture, extension poles; airless and HVLP spray
      rigs;

      five-in-one tool, scrapers, sanding blocks and pole sanders, putty and
      taping

      knives; caulk gun; wet-film and dry-film gauges and a moisture meter for
      serious

      work; tarps, masking tape and film, and a respirator and containment for
      dust and

      lead. The pressure washer and the sander are prep tools, and prep is where
      the

      job is won.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      Painters come late in the build sequence, after drywall finishers,
      carpenters,

      and most trades, and their work shows every defect those trades left
      behind —

      which is the source of most friction, because paint reveals the bad mud
      joint and

      the proud nail the painter didn't create but gets blamed for. They
      coordinate

      with general contractors on dry times and access, with drywall finishers
      on what

      level of finish to expect, and with designers and owners on color and
      sheen.

      Good painters flag substrate problems before they coat over them, because
      once

      it's painted, every flaw becomes the painter's.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      Most of what makes paint last is hidden the moment the finish coat goes
      on, which

      makes the trade a quiet test of honesty. A skipped wash, a missing primer,
      a coat

      sprayed too thin to save material — none of it shows on the day, and all
      of it

      shows in two years after the painter is paid and gone. The duties: prep
      the

      surface the customer can't inspect; disclose and contain lead rather than
      sand it

      into the air; tell the owner when their cheap-color choice needs an extra
      coat

      they didn't budget; and put on the film thickness the system is rated for,
      not

      the one that stretches the gallon. A good paint job and a bad one look
      identical

      the day the check clears.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **Exterior repaint peeling within a year.** A homeowner's two-year-old
      paint job

      is peeling in sheets off the south wall. The expert does the chalk test on
      the

      old surface beneath, finds heavy chalking, and realizes the last crew
      rolled new

      latex straight over weathered, chalky paint without washing or binding it.
      The

      new coat never bonded to the substrate — it bonded to loose powder. The
      fix is to

      pressure-wash, scrape the loose paint, hand-test adhesion, apply a
      chalk-binding

      primer, and recoat. Recoating again without addressing the chalk would
      peel

      again, and the customer would rightly blame the painter.


      **Choosing a system for a new metal railing.** A client wants a black
      gloss

      finish on bare galvanized steel railings. The painter knows ordinary latex
      and

      most alkyds won't bond to fresh galvanizing — the zinc surface saponifies
      oil

      paints and sheds latex. The correct system is to either let it weather and
      clean

      it, or wash and apply a galvanized-metal bonding primer (or a
      direct-to-metal

      acrylic rated for galvanizing) before the gloss topcoat. Picking the
      topcoat by

      its look alone, without the right primer, would put a beautiful finish on
      a

      surface it can't hold.


      **Deep accent wall quoted at two coats.** A designer specs a deep teal
      accent

      wall and the painter's helper quotes two coats over the existing
      off-white. The

      expert overrides it: deep, saturated colors have low hide and the white
      base will

      ghost through. The right approach is a gray-tinted primer matched to the
      topcoat,

      then two finish coats — and pricing it that way up front. Quoting two
      coats over

      white would force the painter to either eat a third coat or hand over a
      streaky,

      under-built wall.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      The drywall finisher hands off the wall the painter coats, and every flaw
      in that

      hand-off becomes the painter's problem. The carpenter builds and installs
      the trim

      and doors the painter finishes. The interior designer specifies the color
      and

      sheen the painter must make real. The mason and the roofer share the
      exterior

      envelope, where coatings, masonry sealers, and flashing all fight the same
      water

      and sun.
  - heading: References
    markdown: >-
      - *Steel Structures Painting Manual (SSPC)* — surface preparation
      standards

      - Manufacturer product data sheets and application specifications
      (Sherwin-
        Williams, Benjamin Moore, PPG)
      - EPA RRP Rule (Renovation, Repair and Painting) for lead-safe work

      - *Painting and Decorating Craftsman's Manual* — PDCA
