Primers & Paint Science
Primer purpose, VOCs, latex vs oil-based paint, paint components, and the science behind paint adhesion and film formation.
- Explain the primary purpose of primer and how it improves paint adhesion
- Define VOC (Volatile Organic Compound) and describe its role in paint chemistry
- Compare latex and oil-based paints including solvents, drying characteristics, and applications
- Identify the four main components of paint - pigment, binder, solvent, and additives
- Describe paint film formation, sealers, blocking resistance, and spread rates
Lección 1
Primer Types & Their Purpose
Why Primers Matter
Every professional painting job begins with the right primer. Primer is a preparatory coating applied before the topcoat to seal the substrate and improve paint adhesion. On the Red Seal exam, you must know that the primary purpose of primer is to seal the substrate and improve paint adhesion - not to add color, provide gloss, or speed drying.
Primers create a uniform surface that allows topcoats to bond properly, hide imperfections, and achieve consistent coverage. Without primer, paint may peel, blister, or show uneven sheen - all defects that cost time and money to repair.
Types of Primers
Latex Primer (water-based) is the most common primer for interior work. It dries quickly, cleans up with water, has low odor, and produces fewer VOCs. Use latex primer on drywall, plaster, and previously painted surfaces in good condition.
Oil-Based Primer (alkyd) provides superior adhesion on challenging surfaces. It penetrates wood grain better than latex and blocks tannin bleed from cedar and redwood. However, it requires mineral spirits for cleanup and produces more VOCs. Use oil-based primer on bare wood, metal, and stain-prone surfaces.
Shellac-Based Primer is the strongest stain blocker available. It seals smoke damage, water stains, marker, and knots that bleed through other primers. Shellac dries extremely fast but has strong fumes and requires denatured alcohol for cleanup.
Latex Primer
Solvent: Water
Cleanup: Soap and water
Best for: Drywall, plaster, repaints
Dry time: 30-60 minutes
Oil-Based Primer
Solvent: Mineral spirits
Cleanup: Mineral spirits
Best for: Bare wood, metal, stains
Dry time: 8-24 hours
Shellac Primer
Solvent: Denatured alcohol
Cleanup: Denatured alcohol
Best for: Smoke, water stains, knots
Dry time: 15-30 minutes
Primer Selection Rules
Choosing the right primer depends on the substrate and the conditions. When the exam asks what type of primer should be used on bare wood, the answer is wood primer or all-purpose primer. Metal surfaces require metal-specific primers with rust-inhibiting properties. Masonry surfaces need primers formulated for alkaline substrates.
Exam Tip - Primer Purpose
When the exam asks "What is the primary purpose of primer?" - the answer is always to seal the substrate and improve paint adhesion.
Primer seals the substrate and improves paint adhesion. Latex primer is best for general interior work, oil-based primer excels on bare wood and metal, and shellac primer is the strongest stain blocker for smoke damage and water stains.