We recently started a project of repainting our whole house and chose cashmere eggshell for the walls and medium luster for the trim. It was so easy to work with, covers great and looks amazing when done! Highly recommend, especially for novice painters. This was my first time painting ever, and it was actually more enjoyable than I thought.
Back when I was a painting contractor, we used Cashmere Lo Luster on new custom homes, and it looked great. Note that you must use a primer with good holdout to do this on new drywall, however, as cheap, chalky primers lead to the paint striking in and showing inconsistent gloss. We used PPG Speedhide 6-2 Latex Sealer. BTW, I would not recommend Cashmere Flat Enamel on ceilings, as it has a slightly higher gloss than most flats, and will highlight waves and imperfections, especially during the morning or evening when sunlight is hitting your ceiling at sharp angles. Promar 400 Flat or PPG Speedhide Pro-EV Flat are better choices for this application.
I have used cashmere with great results before. Emerald wall paint on the other hand is in its own league of awesome. Just like the trim paint, it's the greatest wallpaint I've ever used. Effortlessly gets huge 20' tall walls to look flawless like it was dipped in paint at a factory.
Just happened to paint a couple of accent walls today. One with Benjamin Moore regal egg shell. And the other with cashmere eggshell. Regal is a really good paint but wow I was surprised at how easy and smooth the cashmere was the apply. Longer open time for sure which allows for touch ups. Other reviews say the cashmere self levels which explains the longer open Time. Plus the regal was over $70 a gallon at ace and the cashmere was $42 a gallon my cost at S-W. Duration and emerald are my go to’s for higher traffic areas and I use emerald urethane on trim
I had a VERY hard time working with Sherwin Williams paint. If you have a spot that you sanded flat, their self leveling paint will not create ANY stipple, so the flat spot is always flat no matter how you roll it. The only way to fix that is to use a paint that doesn't self level too much to get the texture back and then put this SW as a top coat. Doubling the work. If you just want to change the color of a wall, this will work fine.
What do you think of a Medium Luster Cashmere Pure White (possibly darker/more bold colors in the bedrooms) on the walls and interior doors throughout a house? I'm rebuilding a fire damaged, gutted, ranch style home with 28 windows. A lot of natural light! The floors will be a light hickory, low sheen. My thinking is the floor will absorb/disperse most of the light. The cabinets will be a red/dark brown stain with matching floor and crown molding throughout the house. I really like the finish the paint creates and how durable it sounds in that finish.
My painter sprayed Cashmere on my (icky) texured walls when I bought this house. It looks fine, but it isn't as durable as the Benjamin Moore paint that I used at my last house. But you get what you pay for. Now I use Sherwin Williams Emerald because it's easier to apply than BM Aura.
We’ve been using SW on our walls for 20 years. I’ve never had any complaints from any of the contractors and my husband he did the painting didn’t mind it either. I always Insisted on cashmere because the finish is just luscious!
I like cashmere better than duration. I used low luster and matte and just found application of cashmere to be more like super paint or Behr product. Still needed two coats but the self level finish is really beautiful with no streaks or noticeable gloss change between rolled areas.
Stumbled across this video looking at your color suggestion videos. Thanks for all the information! So helpful. I used cashmere in my daughter's room over a year ago (it is what the husband brought home from the store as the SW rep's recommendation). It worked great and the end product looks really nice. It is a light grey. Then this summer, I painted my son's room also in cashmere - I like to keep things the same and didn't even think about it. BUT, I would not and will not be using cashmere ever again! I do not know why but it was very thick and the second coat dried so quickly that I could not get the backrolling done right. Now that it is all dried, I am not really happy with the stroke marks I am seeing. Hopefully, artwork etc will help cover or distract from it. Perhaps it is because this is a slightly more saturated color and then a dark accent wall? Or perhaps it is the weather?? I think I painted my daughter's room in the early spring and painted the son's room this summer. Too much heat and humidity? Who knows... Anyways - long story short - I do not recommend cashmere anymore!
We’ve been using SW Cashnere for 20 years. My husband didn’t mind used to here and none of the hired painters ever complained about it. I always insisted on using it on our walls because the finish is just luscious.
Great video, James. The more of your stuff I watch, the more “paint-related” my ads become. 😆 I’ve been seeing a lot of ads for “Backdrop” and “Clare” - online mail-order paint companies with limited color and finish options, that are geared toward making decisions and processes simpler for do-it-yourselfers. Do you have any insights into these companies and the quality of the products?
@@graciesmom95 My name is Stephen, and I have my own cabinet painting company. Personally (and I know that you’ve probably already painted your cabinets by now), I wouldn’t use Cashmere on cabinet painting. It’s not designed for cabinets, and doesn’t have the extreme durability that a quality cabinet paint should have. Emerald by S-W is a decent paint, but to be honest, S-W doesn’t have my go-to cabinet paint. If you want to shop at S-W for a good cabinet paint, I would recommend Pro-Industrial in Satin finish, its done pretty well the few times I’ve used it. But still not my favorite. If dry times between coats aren’t a factor for you, I would recommend Benjamin Moore’s Advance. (16hrs between coats). It is great for trim also, but watch it about 10-15 minutes after you apply it… it has a tendency to run. Though, it’s a very forgiving paint for those who aren’t very experienced, and will always give you a glass smooth finish (even with a brush). If you want to step up your game a little though, I prefer to use Breakthrough by PPG (v250), but it’s very tricky to work with if you haven’t used it before. It looks amazing after 3-4 thin coats, and burnished & wiped smooth after the final coat… To me, it’s the closest thing to a factory cabinet finish and durability that you can get, whichever is always a win in my book 👍🏼 I hope this has helped, I hope that your cabinets turned out great!
I love the cashmere finish. I painted 3 rooms in eggshell. I tried to spray it with wagoner gun and it didn't work. I probably should have thinned it more. So I rolled it and it was hard to cover the Monterey drag wall texture. It took a long time to paint with a thick nap roller and a lot of paint on the roller. Used a lot muscle 💪. Very hard. The paint coverage was great, but the little white spots due to the wall texture made it a very slow process. I hate my wall texture 🙃. It would have covered in 1 coat if it wasnt for the wall texture. I painted over builder grade SW Princeton White flat paint.
The painters start painting my new build today. The builder uses SW ProMar200. I suppose that’s the inexpensive flat builder paint? My hubs is a good painter, I guess we will re paint in a year or so. Update…our paint job is horrible. Builder used painters who had never done residential and it is a mess. All the trim will have to be sanded at some point by us and repainted. Used CHB on the walls also.
I have two friends that are both professional commercial painters. They said the ProMar200 is the best paint made period and not to spend the extra on their Emerald line.
Pro mar 200 comes in flat, eg shell and semi gloss. It's an industry standard. Most of the schools, office buildings, retail stores etc are painted with it. SW doesn't really like selling it to diy customers so they price it high to them but contractors can get it cheaper depending on their purchasing volume. It's really very good!
If I start off with a mildly textured wall in my new build house & paint a room using Cashmere, this paint will not make my mildly textured walls smooth, will it? Or maybe it will make my walls slightly smoother?
No, it’s definitely best as a wall paint. It’s not near as durable as a furniture paint needs to be. I’m sure that the finish will be nice, but the durability won’t be there ProClassic or Pro-Industrial are better choices by S-W for furniture as far as finish and durability, but right now I prefer Breakthrough by PPG for a 1 part cabinet product. Advance by Benjamin Moore is great too, but IMO overall a little softer than Breakthrough, and it takes 30 DAYS to fully cure. I mean… I’m a pro painter, but I don’t like waiting THAT long for paint to fully cure, lol. Another good route (even more durable), would be a tinted “undercoater”, followed by a great water-based polyurethane. This will give you outstanding durability.
@@thepaintpeople I think it can be more convenient to use SW, because there are more stores and they have more open hours than BM stores. But Ace really made a huge difference for me last year because they carry a good variety of BM, they are a quarter of a mile away, and i could order regal select online and stop by and pick up my (already mixed) paint!👍
Regal select is far superior in every way except you have to work quicker with it its all solids and acrylic but worth it you don't need brushability with regal its coverage is better and its far more fair in price.
We have plaster and lath on our first floor and our painter recommended Cashmere for coverage. We went with the color creamy, low luster. I ended up using it upstairs on drywall as well because I loved the coverage and finish.
I don't understand the too "thick" comments. I used Cashmere for the second (and last time). This paint is very runny, drippy, and requires at least three coats. I was painting white over a light tan, but the coverage was terrible. Three and in some places four coats. I won't be using this paint again. Back to the more expensive Benjamin Moore.
I'm sorry, but so much talking about paint and not one visual example of application and finish? Friendly advice, use some small example wall to showcase various finishes, and don't hide behind useless stock footage.
Sooooo… if the paint is too thick, just thin it with extender? Are people that literal? I’m not talking about you Paint People, just the people who complained that Cashmere was too thick.
Cmon guy, self leveling. It’s an alright paint. They are other brands that cover an area better for less money. Lol, the paint moves in and out. Oh brother. P{anting isn’t that hard
This stuff looks great as far as the finish imo. Although their prices are absolutely insane. Way to expensive. Medium honestly looked less shiny than Semi. Idk. I went eggshell on wall, with medium on trim Emerald is the best I've used tho. But way to expensive and honestly not worth it imo
@@MuahMan they have 30% off monthly 40% every couple months 50% personally I’ve NEVER. Seen 50% off’ Even if they did 50% they hide pricing … All they do is mark it up’ tell you 50% off so you actually Got it for 30% over the already inflated price! Tip’ ask around a contractor may be nice and grab u a few gal’ their discount is MASSIVE! Or just be real with clerk area depending Ive gone in and said I need 2 gal of this paint but I don’t have enough and I don’t want to have to do it again’ She gave me a local contractors price $35 a Gallon 🤯 Normally $110 bigger the contractor account the more discount they get’
Dude here is so obviously a paid flack for SW. Certa Pro is a franchise and should be closely studied before forking over any of those hard earned bucks. Yes, SW makes great paint This is a sales pitch..
Not so. Actually, the Paint People stores only sell Benjamin Moore products but on the channel we like to showcase a lot of brands that I have experience with and I don't get paid by any of them.
@@thepaintpeople Our bad! We need to find some of your stores. Nothing like a paint store that is altruistic Benny Moore has great paint too. Even Bill Gates uses it.
Shwrwin williams ..water down thin paint. Always 2 or 3 coats. Use ben moore or dunn edwards as they have more solids. Test yourself. Get 3 paints . Let them dryout and observe which one has more solids remaining. Its not sherwin williams
I have used Cashmere dozens of times at all 3 of my homes, for real. It is my go to paint and always got the job done with 2 coats and no primer. Granted it was never on bare drywall, but if it's been painted, you can count on that. Also, with decent prep work, you will get a super smooth consistent finish. I did use Emerald (in Naval) and it was thinner and took 3 coats but the finish was just as good or better than Cashmere. I should have used a primer that time as the wall sucked in the 1st coat completely.
We recently started a project of repainting our whole house and chose cashmere eggshell for the walls and medium luster for the trim. It was so easy to work with, covers great and looks amazing when done! Highly recommend, especially for novice painters. This was my first time painting ever, and it was actually more enjoyable than I thought.
Great feedback Lauren! Really helpful, thank you!
Hi Lauren. Thanks for sharing! How washable is it?
@@PhAsmaa it’s been great so far! No issues at all with gentle scrubbing.
Back when I was a painting contractor, we used Cashmere Lo Luster on new custom homes, and it looked great. Note that you must use a primer with good holdout to do this on new drywall, however, as cheap, chalky primers lead to the paint striking in and showing inconsistent gloss. We used PPG Speedhide 6-2 Latex Sealer. BTW, I would not recommend Cashmere Flat Enamel on ceilings, as it has a slightly higher gloss than most flats, and will highlight waves and imperfections, especially during the morning or evening when sunlight is hitting your ceiling at sharp angles. Promar 400 Flat or PPG Speedhide Pro-EV Flat are better choices for this application.
Thanks for your insight Herb!
I have used cashmere with great results before. Emerald wall paint on the other hand is in its own league of awesome. Just like the trim paint, it's the greatest wallpaint I've ever used. Effortlessly gets huge 20' tall walls to look flawless like it was dipped in paint at a factory.
What a wouldn't give to dip a wall lol.
@@thepaintpeople How true!
Plus, it would be so fun for all of us "creatives"!! LOL
Like "Extreme Makeover"
Painters/Creators version! 😜
Agree 100%. Even with extender, I have never been able to make Aura look as stipple-free as Emerald.
So emerald you prefer over cashmere? Walls have some texture but not too bad.
How has touch ups been for you guys?
Unfortunately I had some not so well experience with cashmere and darker colors.
Finally a review about Cashmere, I love the flat enamel.
Nice! Glad you like!
Just happened to paint a couple of accent walls today. One with Benjamin Moore regal egg shell. And the other with cashmere eggshell. Regal is a really good paint but wow I was surprised at how easy and smooth the cashmere was the apply. Longer open time for sure which allows for touch ups. Other reviews say the cashmere self levels which explains the longer open Time. Plus the regal was over $70 a gallon at ace and the cashmere was $42 a gallon my cost at S-W. Duration and emerald are my go to’s for higher traffic areas and I use emerald urethane on trim
In Canada this product is called Opulence and it is our go to paint for most interior projects. We use Low sheen eggshell. Beautiful finish.
I had a VERY hard time working with Sherwin Williams paint. If you have a spot that you sanded flat, their self leveling paint will not create ANY stipple, so the flat spot is always flat no matter how you roll it. The only way to fix that is to use a paint that doesn't self level too much to get the texture back and then put this SW as a top coat. Doubling the work. If you just want to change the color of a wall, this will work fine.
Would love to hear your comments on Lowe's Sherwin Williams Infinity.
What do you think of a Medium Luster Cashmere Pure White (possibly darker/more bold colors in the bedrooms) on the walls and interior doors throughout a house? I'm rebuilding a fire damaged, gutted, ranch style home with 28 windows. A lot of natural light! The floors will be a light hickory, low sheen. My thinking is the floor will absorb/disperse most of the light. The cabinets will be a red/dark brown stain with matching floor and crown molding throughout the house. I really like the finish the paint creates and how durable it sounds in that finish.
Is it safe to use the cashmere low luster in a bathroom?
Clarification. Cashmere high luster is suggested for kitchens and baths.?
My painter sprayed Cashmere on my (icky) texured walls when I bought this house. It looks fine, but it isn't as durable as the Benjamin Moore paint that I used at my last house. But you get what you pay for. Now I use Sherwin Williams Emerald because it's easier to apply than BM Aura.
We’ve been using SW on our walls for 20 years. I’ve never had any complaints from any of the contractors and my husband he did the painting didn’t mind it either. I always Insisted on cashmere because the finish is just luscious!
Nice! Glad it worked for you!
I like cashmere better than duration. I used low luster and matte and just found application of cashmere to be more like super paint or Behr product. Still needed two coats but the self level finish is really beautiful with no streaks or noticeable gloss change between rolled areas.
Hey TAPS! Thanks for sharing your experience with these products. Helpful to those considering using!
@@thepaintpeople love this channel… one of a kind!
A VERY elegant and classy color. ❤️
Glad you like Gregory!
SW says use correct roller. Med nap recommended for paint
Cashmere low luster us it all the time for walls in homes and SW CHB flat white for ceilings perfect combo !!!
Thanks Dan!
Pearl or low luster works great for me I’ve also seen a velvet finish I. Cashmere
I've been wondering about those two finish options especially velvet.
We are painting our walls with SW Duration Matte and it is FANTASTIC!
Thanks for the review! Glad it worked out for you!
Is there a Benjamin Moore product that is like it?
Hi Sandy, probably Benjamin Moore’s Regal Select.
@0:03, do you know what's that color?
COM parable. Driving me nuts! Accent on first syllable. Thanks.
I feel like comments on my accent/pronunciation has become a bit of a meme at this point... :P
Stumbled across this video looking at your color suggestion videos. Thanks for all the information! So helpful.
I used cashmere in my daughter's room over a year ago (it is what the husband brought home from the store as the SW rep's recommendation). It worked great and the end product looks really nice. It is a light grey.
Then this summer, I painted my son's room also in cashmere - I like to keep things the same and didn't even think about it. BUT, I would not and will not be using cashmere ever again! I do not know why but it was very thick and the second coat dried so quickly that I could not get the backrolling done right. Now that it is all dried, I am not really happy with the stroke marks I am seeing. Hopefully, artwork etc will help cover or distract from it. Perhaps it is because this is a slightly more saturated color and then a dark accent wall? Or perhaps it is the weather?? I think I painted my daughter's room in the early spring and painted the son's room this summer. Too much heat and humidity? Who knows...
Anyways - long story short - I do not recommend cashmere anymore!
great video! please keep em' coming!
Thanks for watching Derrick!
We’ve been using SW Cashnere for 20 years. My husband didn’t mind used to here and none of the hired painters ever complained about it. I always insisted on using it on our walls because the finish is just luscious.
Luscious! Great word!
So cashmere flat is actually a matte? That’s what I was told at store
Great video, James. The more of your stuff I watch, the more “paint-related” my ads become. 😆 I’ve been seeing a lot of ads for “Backdrop” and “Clare” - online mail-order paint companies with limited color and finish options, that are geared toward making decisions and processes simpler for do-it-yourselfers. Do you have any insights into these companies and the quality of the products?
Limited color? I could never! Lol.
Can you suggest what paint/finish I should use to paint kitchen cabinets. I want a smooth & not too shiny finish. Thank you
Hi there, the advantage of a higher sheen is better durability. So I personally, would go eggshell or satin.
@@thepaintpeople thank you so much for responding. Does it matter if we use Cashmere or Emerald or something else?
@@graciesmom95 My name is Stephen, and I have my own cabinet painting company. Personally (and I know that you’ve probably already painted your cabinets by now), I wouldn’t use Cashmere on cabinet painting. It’s not designed for cabinets, and doesn’t have the extreme durability that a quality cabinet paint should have.
Emerald by S-W is a decent paint, but to be honest, S-W doesn’t have my go-to cabinet paint. If you want to shop at S-W for a good cabinet paint, I would recommend Pro-Industrial in Satin finish, its done pretty well the few times I’ve used it. But still not my favorite.
If dry times between coats aren’t a factor for you, I would recommend Benjamin Moore’s Advance. (16hrs between coats). It is great for trim also, but watch it about 10-15 minutes after you apply it… it has a tendency to run. Though, it’s a very forgiving paint for those who aren’t very experienced, and will always give you a glass smooth finish (even with a brush).
If you want to step up your game a little though, I prefer to use Breakthrough by PPG (v250), but it’s very tricky to work with if you haven’t used it before. It looks amazing after 3-4 thin coats, and burnished & wiped smooth after the final coat… To me, it’s the closest thing to a factory cabinet finish and durability that you can get, whichever is always a win in my book 👍🏼
I hope this has helped, I hope that your cabinets turned out great!
I love the cashmere finish. I painted 3 rooms in eggshell. I tried to spray it with wagoner gun and it didn't work. I probably should have thinned it more. So I rolled it and it was hard to cover the Monterey drag wall texture. It took a long time to paint with a thick nap roller and a lot of paint on the roller. Used a lot muscle 💪. Very hard. The paint coverage was great, but the little white spots due to the wall texture made it a very slow process. I hate my wall texture 🙃. It would have covered in 1 coat if it wasnt for the wall texture. I painted over builder grade SW Princeton White flat paint.
Wow, glad you got through it Liz!
The painters start painting my new build today. The builder uses SW ProMar200. I suppose that’s the inexpensive flat builder paint? My hubs is a good painter, I guess we will re paint in a year or so.
Update…our paint job is horrible. Builder used painters who had never done residential and it is a mess. All the trim will have to be sanded at some point by us and repainted. Used CHB on the walls also.
It's good! Very durable. Builders use it because it's abrasion resistant.
I have two friends that are both professional commercial painters. They said the ProMar200 is the best paint made period and not to spend the extra on their Emerald line.
@@MuahMan actually I found out they used CHB on my new build. Terrible painters & they messed up our custom trim. 😣
Pro Mar 200 is SW #1 selling paint they won't tell you that because they want you to pay high dollar for the same as pro mar
Pro mar 200 comes in flat, eg shell and semi gloss. It's an industry standard. Most of the schools, office buildings, retail stores etc are painted with it. SW doesn't really like selling it to diy customers so they price it high to them but contractors can get it cheaper depending on their purchasing volume. It's really very good!
If I start off with a mildly textured wall in my new build house & paint a room using Cashmere, this paint will not make my mildly textured walls smooth, will it? Or maybe it will make my walls slightly smoother?
If you use the Cashmere in flat, it will certainly avoid drawing attention to the texture, but no paint is capable of taking away the texture itself.
@@spaghettigal Thank you!
I don't think so but if you use flat it will be less noticeable, more sheen more noticeable.
I love cashmere paint. Low VOC covers well, thanks 😊
Nice! Thanks for sharing your experience Sharon!
Great review
Would this be good to use on furniture?
I prefer Sherwin Williams Pro Classic for furniture.
No, it’s definitely best as a wall paint. It’s not near as durable as a furniture paint needs to be. I’m sure that the finish will be nice, but the durability won’t be there
ProClassic or Pro-Industrial are better choices by S-W for furniture as far as finish and durability, but right now I prefer Breakthrough by PPG for a 1 part cabinet product. Advance by Benjamin Moore is great too, but IMO overall a little softer than Breakthrough, and it takes 30 DAYS to fully cure. I mean… I’m a pro painter, but I don’t like waiting THAT long for paint to fully cure, lol.
Another good route (even more durable), would be a tinted “undercoater”, followed by a great water-based polyurethane. This will give you outstanding durability.
Does anyone have any thoughts about how cashmere compares to regal select?
Many prefer Regal Select in terms of quality but it also happens to be cheaper which is always good.
@@thepaintpeople I think it can be more convenient to use SW, because there are more stores and they have more open hours than BM stores. But Ace really made a huge difference for me last year because they carry a good variety of BM, they are a quarter of a mile away, and i could order regal select online and stop by and pick up my (already mixed) paint!👍
Regal select is far superior in every way except you have to work quicker with it its all solids and acrylic but worth it you don't need brushability with regal its coverage is better and its far more fair in price.
My favorite paint
Love this 😍
Nice!
We have plaster and lath on our first floor and our painter recommended Cashmere for coverage. We went with the color creamy, low luster. I ended up using it upstairs on drywall as well because I loved the coverage and finish.
Niiice! Thanks for sharing your experience Susan!
I'm using Cashmere now, good stuff but it seems SUPER thick and it dries really quickly so backrolling is hard.
If you're a Canadian company you should be calling it Opulence as it's sold in Canada
Good point Taylor, but, surprisingly, the majority of our youtube audience is from the US, so we reference those brands also.
like with other SW paints it dries much duller and drier than the finish you get, SW rep even confirmed that to me.
Finishes: Pearl. Eggshell. Satin. To me all 3 are pretty much identical.
Who else noticed the hideous drywall work at 5:47?
That’s splotchy AF!
Saw a new build listed In my area and on of the rooms you could literally see the V marks on 2 of the 3 walls it was bad!
I don't understand the too "thick" comments. I used Cashmere for the second (and last time). This paint is very runny, drippy, and requires at least three coats. I was painting white over a light tan, but the coverage was terrible. Three and in some places four coats. I won't be using this paint again. Back to the more expensive Benjamin Moore.
I'm sorry, but so much talking about paint and not one visual example of application and finish? Friendly advice, use some small example wall to showcase various finishes, and don't hide behind useless stock footage.
Sooooo… if the paint is too thick, just thin it with extender? Are people that literal? I’m not talking about you Paint People, just the people who complained that Cashmere was too thick.
Cmon guy, self leveling. It’s an alright paint. They are other brands that cover an area better for less money. Lol, the paint moves in and out. Oh brother. P{anting isn’t that hard
This stuff looks great as far as the finish imo. Although their prices are absolutely insane. Way to expensive. Medium honestly looked less shiny than Semi. Idk. I went eggshell on wall, with medium on trim
Emerald is the best I've used tho. But way to expensive and honestly not worth it imo
Thanks for sharing your experience.
Everyone’s prices are insane and Sherwin will actually work with you on price
They have 40-50% off sales like once a month. I only buy it on sale. Get the Emerald for like 58/gal and the Cashmere for $39/gal
@@MuahMan they have 30% off monthly
40% every couple months
50% personally I’ve NEVER. Seen 50% off’
Even if they did 50% they hide pricing …
All they do is mark it up’ tell you 50% off so you actually
Got it for 30% over the already inflated price!
Tip’ ask around a contractor may be nice and grab u a few gal’ their discount is MASSIVE!
Or just be real with clerk area depending
Ive gone in and said I need 2 gal of this paint but I don’t have enough and I don’t want to have to do it again’
She gave me a local contractors price $35 a Gallon 🤯 Normally $110 bigger the contractor account the more discount they get’
@@joshymcdaniel9233 50% off for contractors, they gouge the diy homeowner.
Cashmere flat is more of a washable flat has a angle Sheen to it. The super paint is dead flat
Thanks Chris!
Let's see evidence???
SW Cashmere low lustre paint is TERRIBLE. It cannot be touched up, like eggshell.
"Should you use sherwin williams cashmere?" title and not ONE example? Really? What a waste of time. If you're seeing this, scroll on.
I think the real question is... are you actually Bob Dylan's daughter?
I was just going to say do you have an example?
Dude here is so obviously a paid flack for SW. Certa Pro is a franchise and should be closely studied before forking over any of those hard earned bucks. Yes, SW makes great paint This is a sales pitch..
Not so. Actually, the Paint People stores only sell Benjamin Moore products but on the channel we like to showcase a lot of brands that I have experience with and I don't get paid by any of them.
@@thepaintpeople Our bad! We need to find some of your stores. Nothing like a paint store that is altruistic Benny Moore has great paint too. Even Bill Gates uses it.
@@thepaintpeople ahhh does that mean your going to do a video on what its like to actually work with fine paints of europe?
Shwrwin williams ..water down thin paint.
Always 2 or 3 coats.
Use ben moore or dunn edwards as they have more solids.
Test yourself.
Get 3 paints .
Let them dryout and observe which one has more solids remaining.
Its not sherwin williams
Paid propaganda
I have used Cashmere dozens of times at all 3 of my homes, for real. It is my go to paint and always got the job done with 2 coats and no primer. Granted it was never on bare drywall, but if it's been painted, you can count on that. Also, with decent prep work, you will get a super smooth consistent finish. I did use Emerald (in Naval) and it was thinner and took 3 coats but the finish was just as good or better than Cashmere. I should have used a primer that time as the wall sucked in the 1st coat completely.
Thanks for sharing your experience!