So here is our plan:
White on top, aqua on bottom with a silver z-stripe down the middle cause every great vintage trailer's gotta have a z-stripe right?
Fist Step: Self Etching Primer
After thoroughly scrubbing the trailer down and sanding any chipping areas (not many as most of the paint was just simply worn off), we then gave the trailer a quick scuff with dry scotch brite pads and then a quick wipe down with some paint prep cleaner that a friend who does this professionally gave us I think it was called lacquer and varnish cleaner or something like that. Then we sprayed the trailer down with cans of self etching primer- concentrating on the areas where the aluminum was bare so that the primer would stick to the aluminum and bind to the new paint.The Primer and Sealer that we used |
Me looking oh so fashionable! |
Second Step: Sealer
Here we go- first use of a spray gun/compressor (not too bad for newbies I must say- only a few drips here and there). We started on the roof and worked our way down, had to wait for a day that wasn't too windy so that we wouldn't get paint on our neighbors houses or cars.Ok- ready to paint now ;-)
Third Step: White Topcoat Paint
Here is what we used, ended up paying way more than what we budgeted for but hopefully it's worth it in the end. Almost $800 total to prime/seal/paint the trailer- probably would have been a lot cheaper and easier to pay someone else to do it! But that would have taken all the fun out of it now ;-)Fourth Step: Aqua Topcoat on the lower half
Next we masked off the top edge of our z-stripe and masked off all of the upper half of the trailer. Ready to spray the bottom half aqua color.Spray, spray, spray before it gets too warm to paint!
I need to catch up!! Looks like a great project.
ReplyDeleteFun!!!