I have a wooden bed frame that was previously stained and (I believe) had some sort of clear coat, that I'm repainting with Behr Premium Satin spray paint + primer. After sanding with 220 grit, blowing off the dust, wiping-down with a dry cotton towel, then spray painting, most of the pieces turned out great. However, two pieces of the bed frame keep getting a crinkly finish as the paint dries. I've googled this, but none of the suggestions I've found (paint applied too thick, paint or piece either too hot or too cold, surface is wet / greasy / dirty) seem to be what's happening here.
What I've tried to correct the crinkly paint so far: let the crinkly paint cure for 2 days; sand-down the crinkly patches and surrounding area (I've also tried sanding-down the entire board); blow-off the dust with compressed air; wipe down the pieces with a damp cotton rag, folding / swapping rags to use a fresh bit until it comes up clean; allow the surface to air dry; re-paint.
In my latest attempt, in addition to repeating the above, I moved both the paint and the two pieces indoors for 24 hours to warm up (68° F). Then I used a fresh cotton rag to wipe them down with 70% rubbing alcohol, allowed them to dry, then repainted, but it still turned out crinkly.
Any advice would be appreciated!
zedsmith t1_ja0sydp wrote
Don’t trust products that say “paint and primer in one”
A good bonding primer should have been your second to last step.