Quite good stuff this. Me and my dad used it for the first time last month on a job and both of us were very impressed. My dads been decorating for 40+ years and is very old fashioned and sceptical on these kinds of products, but even he was sold. Flawless finish that would take us longer to cut in free hand. Customer was over the moon too 👍🏼
Great review,been wanting to try this product for a while. Good honest review Phil ..always good to here a professionals opinion and I'm all up for making life easier in this game. "Work smarter not harder". 👌
I'm here to help... I cover loads of stuff of great interest to some..my kids think it's sad and boring and said noone would watch any of them. I tell them 40k have watched about the Lidl sprayer I bought lol
Been using this for a couple of years...mostly on those pesky Georgian glazed doors. However some people say a decent decorator shouldn't need to mask when brushing, can't comment on spraying coz I don't spray.
Been wondering about this product for a while! Might have to get me self some, not a bad price either. When it comes to Sash’s, do you take of the staff beads to get to the runners and all of the casement.?
Great videos! I love your channel, thanks for all the useful tips! 😊 Could you please let me know which paint and undercoat you use to spray wood? Thanks a bunch!
Bit dubious to how this affects the coating system, especially on an external, with this underneath the actual surface to be painted. Fairly new to the market so no one knows for sure yet but I'd be fairly confident that this would affect the longevity of the system 100%. Probably fine internally though
You’re instincts are correct mother fucker. We tested this product extensively over the summer on approx 50 Georgian sash windows. External. When you flood onto the edges you are essentially creating a film that the paint sits on. They say it’s a primer but it isn’t the intended surface in my view. I’m not convinced by it for high end work. For fast volume and spraying then yes it works but I can’t say it’s the product that I won’t get a call back on.
Do you think this would work on hinges! I have lots of jobs that require spray in place doors. It seems like it would be easier than masking them with tape followed by cutting the excess tape in the groove of the hinge/door edge
Spraylat from Corby do one called protectapeel...not sure about it permanently adhering to old paint, but I've used it for protecting fittings and masking areas for stencilling, dec effects or masking large areas to create designs etc Or just masking windows for privacy while you paint
@Phil Beckwith The Professional Painter & Decorator More of a protect / masking product.. I cant say I've used it in the same situation as the windows, being able to adhere to paint in the form of a primer is a great plus for the one you have there 👍 They do a few different products. One limitation of liquid masking can be using on matt emul
I can't help but think it's easier and quicker to apply painters tape to external windows/doors. Internal doors as a DIYer maybe this product would be ok but it does seem to be a lengthy process
A lad is this a two part product as on the manufacturer video there is a primer 1st then apply top coat with the product..? But u just put the top coat on
@@ProfessionalPainterDecorator I am as sure as breathing lol very much interested in the product would like to get the orange colour too funny thing is can use it for Halloween then and white for Christmas.. Ideas lol, that's why I was asking as if it is just 1 part two coats even better .
by time you have messed around with that you could have cut the windows in professionally as you still have to be good at cutting in for it to be any good
Don’t see the point you have to match the last paint job done inside and also to match the weather seal on the glass outside videos of this product on you tube done 9 years verdict a waste of time
This is not a “really, really brief simple video”… too bad you didn’t take your camera OFF your tripod and go in for a really closeup shot - because this does not show me what I’d be looking for to be sold on it. The windows are overblown so you can tell where the edges are - so this is really not the proper way to show off what this product really does. Ease of Cleanup is the MAIN reason why someone would use this - and you failed to show the result up close.
sorry you feel like that.... what more did you want to know about it, did I not explain it fully enough in my brief 10 min video? I use it in this video to great effect as well, have you seen it yet? th-cam.com/video/T_zH_4yJZ3g/w-d-xo.html
Doesn’t strike me as being very environmentally friendly - let’s remove all these VOCs from paints then create a product that effectively turns into plastic waste?!?
Really? If you spray you have to use tape & paper to mask, ain't sure those are that environmentally friendly to produce or dispose of either. And what woodwork paint you using that is zero VOC?
yes but it may be recyclable plastic isn't bad for the environment the people who send to it to land fill throw it on the floor and in the sea are. all modern paints are plastics acrylics vinyls alkyds what is the binder for your solvent based paints is a polyester almost every typical synthetic product as polyester in it
If you wanna be an artist and spend hours tediously cutting in pain windows to prove you can cut in then you crack on mate. If there's an easy solution then let's go for that..times have moved on 👌
@@tonyrussell496 I agree to a point. Personally, by the time I’d have put this stuff on , drying times and then cutting around it and peeling off, I’d have the window cut in and done no problem. There’s a place for the old and new. The best decorators will employ both
It depends on what you’re doing. If you want to spray the finish then cutting in is irrelevant. If you’re hand painting then this product is irrelevant. That’s my summary
yet another product thats going to take more of our work £32 Phil for 1l dam get a litre of undercoat and gloss for that and half a litre for one sash not practical you could lose work pricing this with a lot of people
Quite good stuff this. Me and my dad used it for the first time last month on a job and both of us were very impressed. My dads been decorating for 40+ years and is very old fashioned and sceptical on these kinds of products, but even he was sold. Flawless finish that would take us longer to cut in free hand. Customer was over the moon too 👍🏼
was that for spraying or brushing?
Great review,been wanting to try this product for a while. Good honest review Phil ..always good to here a professionals opinion and I'm all up for making life easier in this game. "Work smarter not harder". 👌
Glad to help
Try it, you'll be glad you did.
With the advantage of quick clean up after, the wait time in the beginning is not really too bad.
Phil would this be an option for door hinges? Have you tried it?
Cheers for the videos
not tried it, be easier to put some tape on id think tbh
Great videos on painting and decorating. I have watched about 10 so far since yesterday.
I'm here to help... I cover loads of stuff of great interest to some..my kids think it's sad and boring and said noone would watch any of them. I tell them 40k have watched about the Lidl sprayer I bought lol
Hi just watched Stop losing money. The advice actually helped me in my business and was helpful on the running costs. Everyone should watch and learn.
@@bernardhughes7794 tnx.. and isn't it so simple when explained... help like, share share share away that video ;)
Been using this for a couple of years...mostly on those pesky Georgian glazed doors. However some people say a decent decorator shouldn't need to mask when brushing, can't comment on spraying coz I don't spray.
A decent decorator won't beat a straight line from masking tape etc. It's as simple as that.
Been wondering about this product for a while!
Might have to get me self some, not a bad price either.
When it comes to Sash’s, do you take of the staff beads to get to the runners and all of the casement.?
No, I don't take it off.
If a traditional sash the left side comes off so the casement can be taken out.
Great videos! I love your channel, thanks for all the useful tips! 😊 Could you please let me know which paint and undercoat you use to spray wood? Thanks a bunch!
Let me check. LoL.
Some videos out about woodwork spraying... And more coming.
Bit dubious to how this affects the coating system, especially on an external, with this underneath the actual surface to be painted. Fairly new to the market so no one knows for sure yet but I'd be fairly confident that this would affect the longevity of the system 100%. Probably fine internally though
You’re instincts are correct mother fucker. We tested this product extensively over the summer on approx 50 Georgian sash windows. External. When you flood onto the edges you are essentially creating a film that the paint sits on. They say it’s a primer but it isn’t the intended surface in my view. I’m not convinced by it for high end work. For fast volume and spraying then yes it works but I can’t say it’s the product that I won’t get a call back on.
Do you think this would work on hinges! I have lots of jobs that require spray in place doors. It seems like it would be easier than masking them with tape followed by cutting the excess tape in the groove of the hinge/door edge
It should. Give it a try
Can this be used on UPVC windows and doors Phil or just wooden frames?
on the glass?
@@ProfessionalPainterDecorator I realise it goes on the glass but it says on the tin for wooden frames
That liquid mask, what about spraying it on, would make painting glass panel dorrs real quick
you can do.
Giving it a try next week
Spraylat from Corby do one called protectapeel...not sure about it permanently adhering to old paint, but I've used it for protecting fittings and masking areas for stencilling, dec effects or masking large areas to create designs etc
Or just masking windows for privacy while you paint
Hi Steve, is it very similar, or more a protect product, than a paint onto coating?
@Phil Beckwith The Professional Painter & Decorator More of a protect / masking product.. I cant say I've used it in the same situation as the windows, being able to adhere to paint in the form of a primer is a great plus for the one you have there 👍
They do a few different products. One limitation of liquid masking can be using on matt emul
Can this be used externally
As long as it won't get rained on
I can't help but think it's easier and quicker to apply painters tape to external windows/doors. Internal doors as a DIYer maybe this product would be ok but it does seem to be a lengthy process
Watch the video on spraying velux windows I did a few months ago... If it's warm it does dry quick to get a second coat on.
@@ProfessionalPainterDecorator Fair play, might be easier for spraying
Spoke to the company about environmental impact and they told me the waste will biodegrade.
A lad is this a two part product as on the manufacturer video there is a primer 1st then apply top coat with the product..? But u just put the top coat on
Are you sure,? This is just as I show it, give two coats.. done
@@ProfessionalPainterDecorator I am as sure as breathing lol very much interested in the product would like to get the orange colour too funny thing is can use it for Halloween then and white for Christmas.. Ideas lol, that's why I was asking as if it is just 1 part two coats even better .
@@JacobBentley-j3t lol this stuff isn't orange, I think that's another brand.
by time you have messed around with that you could have cut the windows in professionally as you still have to be good at cutting in for it to be any good
spraying?
Have you tried it on upvc?
In what way? The glass??
Thanks, good product review,👍 not me seems like too much "faffing" about
it has its place
does this work on exteriors also?
i can't see why not as long as it doesn't rain
Why do you need to paint the whole piece of glass? Can’t you just go around the perimeter with 40mm border?
I sprayed the whole window.
@@ProfessionalPainterDecorator 🤦🏼
Don’t see the point you have to match the last paint job done inside and also to match the weather seal on the glass outside videos of this product on you tube done 9 years verdict a waste of time
So if that's the case, after how long before the paint has covered the glass on small panes. Scrape back to neat edge first surely?
@@0skar9193 nobody dose that in the uk years of oil based paint can’t be scraped back neatly
This is not a “really, really brief simple video”… too bad you didn’t take your camera OFF your tripod and go in for a really closeup shot - because this does not show me what I’d be looking for to be sold on it. The windows are overblown so you can tell where the edges are - so this is really not the proper way to show off what this product really does. Ease of Cleanup is the MAIN reason why someone would use this - and you failed to show the result up close.
sorry you feel like that.... what more did you want to know about it, did I not explain it fully enough in my brief 10 min video?
I use it in this video to great effect as well, have you seen it yet?
th-cam.com/video/T_zH_4yJZ3g/w-d-xo.html
Doesn’t strike me as being very environmentally friendly - let’s remove all these VOCs from paints then create a product that effectively turns into plastic waste?!?
waterbased plastic waste lol
Really? If you spray you have to use tape & paper to mask, ain't sure those are that environmentally friendly to produce or dispose of either. And what woodwork paint you using that is zero VOC?
@@0skar9193 agreed, I wasn’t comparing the two just an observation 👍🏻
yes but it may be recyclable plastic isn't bad for the environment the people who send to it to land fill throw it on the floor and in the sea are. all modern paints are plastics acrylics vinyls alkyds what is the binder for your solvent based paints is a polyester almost every typical synthetic product as polyester in it
mask off the wood to spray mask off on glass. or paint will not stick to wood. oxymorons
What ever happened to the art of cutting in
If you wanna be an artist and spend hours tediously cutting in pain windows to prove you can cut in then you crack on mate. If there's an easy solution then let's go for that..times have moved on 👌
The cost of employing pros is too high for some people (like me) so we/they are trying to make their homes look nice themselves.
@@tonyrussell496 I agree to a point. Personally, by the time I’d have put this stuff on , drying times and then cutting around it and peeling off, I’d have the window cut in and done no problem. There’s a place for the old and new. The best decorators will employ both
It depends on what you’re doing. If you want to spray the finish then cutting in is irrelevant. If you’re hand painting then this product is irrelevant. That’s my summary
Yeh why use a table saw when you can cut the wood with your teeth
yet another product thats going to take more of our work £32 Phil for 1l dam get a litre of undercoat and gloss for that and half a litre for one sash not practical you could lose work pricing this with a lot of people
Two rooms woodwork sprayed out in 20mins.
@@ProfessionalPainterDecorator oh fair doo's Phil didn't know you were spraying
you need the laziest people. for this CRAP