- How much does a painter cost in Delft?
- Painter rates in Delft, ZH vary by room size, prep, and finish. Compare verified painters on HireLocal and get free quotes.
- How do I find a painter in ZH?
- HireLocal verifies every painter. See painters in Delft, ZH with real ratings and reviews, and get free quotes.
- What is a Lead paint?
- Paint containing lead, common in homes built before 1978. Disturbing lead paint creates hazardous dust. Removal or encapsulation often requires a licensed lead-abatement contractor.
- What is a Primer?
- A base coat applied before paint to improve adhesion, hide stains, and reduce the number of topcoats. Essential on new drywall, bare wood, or when changing colors dramatically.
- What is a VOC?
- Volatile organic compounds. Chemicals in many paints that evaporate and can affect indoor air quality. Low-VOC and zero-VOC paints are available for healthier interiors.
- What is a Color matching?
- Matching a new coat of paint to an existing color (e.g. after a patch). Painters use samples, fan decks, or spectrophotometers to get a close match; lighting affects how color looks.
- What is a Pressure washing?
- Using high-pressure water to clean exterior surfaces like driveways, siding, decks, and fences. Often performed before exterior painting to remove dirt, mold, and loose paint. Power washers use heated water; pressure washers use cold — both are effective for different surfaces.
- What is a Stucco repair?
- Fixing cracks, chips, or water-damaged areas in stucco exterior walls. Small cracks can be patched with caulk or premixed stucco; larger damage may require removing the damaged section and reapplying base and finish coats. Matching the existing texture is the main challenge.
- What is a Power washing vs soft washing?
- Two distinct exterior cleaning methods. Power washing (also called pressure washing) uses a high-pressure water stream (1,500–4,000 PSI) to blast away dirt, grime, mold, and old paint from hard surfaces like concrete driveways, brick, stone, and metal. It cleans through mechanical force. Soft washing uses a low-pressure pump (under 500 PSI) that applies a cleaning solution — typically sodium hypochlorite (bleach), surfactants, and sometimes algaecides — to dissolve organic growth like algae, mold, mildew, and lichen. It cleans through chemistry, not pressure. The key distinction matters because using high pressure on the wrong surface causes damage: it strips paint, gouges wood siding, cracks vinyl, destroys mortar joints, and can force water behind siding into walls. Soft washing is the correct method for roofs (asphalt shingles, tile, metal), painted wood, vinyl siding, stucco, and any surface that can't withstand high pressure. Power washing is appropriate for concrete, pavers, unpainted brick, and natural stone. Cost: $200–$500 for a typical driveway pressure wash; $300–$600 for a soft wash of a home's exterior siding and trim.
- What is a Latex vs. oil-based paint?
- The choice between latex (water-based) and oil-based paint is one of the most fundamental decisions in any painting project, affecting durability, application, drying time, cleanup, and health considerations. Latex paint uses water as its primary solvent and acrylic or vinyl resins as binders. It has largely replaced oil-based paint for most residential applications because it dries faster (1–2 hours touch-dry vs. 6–8 hours for oil), has lower VOC emissions (50–150 g/L vs. 300–500 g/L), cleans up with soap and water, remains flexible so it resists cracking on surfaces that expand and contract, and doesn't yellow over time. Modern premium latex paints like Benjamin Moore Advance and Sherwin-Williams Emerald Urethane have closed the durability gap significantly. Oil-based paint (technically alkyd paint in modern formulations) still excels in specific applications: it produces an exceptionally smooth, hard, and durable finish ideal for trim, doors, cabinets, and high-traffic surfaces. Oil paint levels better (brush marks self-smooth), adheres tenaciously to challenging surfaces like bare metal and glossy existing finishes, and provides superior stain blocking on materials like knotty pine and cedar. The trade-offs are longer dry time, strong odor requiring good ventilation, cleanup requiring mineral spirits, and higher VOC content that has led several states to restrict or ban oil-based paints for interior use. Cost-wise, both types range from $25–$75 per gallon for premium formulations. A professional painter can advise which type is appropriate for each surface in your project — many jobs use both: latex on walls and ceilings, oil-based on trim and doors.