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Painting Ceramic for Outdoor Use

Posted: Fri Mar 03, 2017 10:23 am
by G26ster
What better place to get advice for painting ceramics then from a gun forum :biggrinjester:

Anyhoo, I have a lighthouse I bought from Harbor Freight years ago that is either ceramic or ceramic coated. It is all white and IMHO "ugly." I want to paint it to look nice for the garden. So, I have some questions for anyone that does ceramics.

1. Will paint made for ceramics last outdoors? It will NOT be baked on.

2. Can I use urethane spray coating over the ceramic paint, to further protect it, without interfering chemically with the paint?

If the above is not a good idea, any suggestions for a type of paint to use for outdoor use that will last in our Texas sun and summer heat?

Re: Painting Ceramic for Outdoor Use

Posted: Fri Mar 03, 2017 11:15 am
by G26ster

Re: Painting Ceramic for Outdoor Use

Posted: Fri Mar 03, 2017 12:02 pm
by The Annoyed Man
Requires no oven curing, and comes in different colors: https://www.cerakoteguncoatings.com/fin ... at=CSERIES. I have some on a suppressor of mine, so it withstands high heat just fine. It ought to withstand the weather just fine too, and since it is a surface treatment of sorts, it will probably not penetrate and harm the ceramic material.

Re: Painting Ceramic for Outdoor Use

Posted: Fri Mar 03, 2017 12:10 pm
by G26ster
The Annoyed Man wrote:Requires no oven curing, and comes in different colors: https://www.cerakoteguncoatings.com/fin ... at=CSERIES. I have some on a suppressor of mine, so it withstands high heat just fine. It ought to withstand the weather just fine too, and since it is a surface treatment of sorts, it will probably not penetrate and harm the ceramic material.
Thanks TAM. The paint ceramic paint I found at Michael's is $2.99/8 oz. vs. $35.00/4 oz. for the Cerakote. Since I need 4 colors, I'd greatly break the bank with the Cerakote for a garden ornament :shock: :lol:

Re: Painting Ceramic for Outdoor Use

Posted: Fri Mar 03, 2017 1:50 pm
by RPBrown
This paint will not last very long outdoors, especially in our ever changing weather, unless you spray it with a clear coat poly or epoxy coating, or unless you glaze it and fire it.

Never thought Mom's ceramic shop teachings would be helpful on a gun board LOL

Re: Painting Ceramic for Outdoor Use

Posted: Fri Mar 03, 2017 2:52 pm
by The Annoyed Man
G26ster wrote:
The Annoyed Man wrote:Requires no oven curing, and comes in different colors: https://www.cerakoteguncoatings.com/fin ... at=CSERIES. I have some on a suppressor of mine, so it withstands high heat just fine. It ought to withstand the weather just fine too, and since it is a surface treatment of sorts, it will probably not penetrate and harm the ceramic material.
Thanks TAM. The paint ceramic paint I found at Michael's is $2.99/8 oz. vs. $35.00/4 oz. for the Cerakote. Since I need 4 colors, I'd greatly break the bank with the Cerakote for a garden ornament :shock: :lol:
You'd rather spend $2.99 instead of $35.00? Wassamadayou? "rlol"

Re: Painting Ceramic for Outdoor Use

Posted: Fri Mar 03, 2017 8:44 pm
by G26ster
RPBrown wrote:This paint will not last very long outdoors, especially in our ever changing weather, unless you spray it with a clear coat poly or epoxy coating, or unless you glaze it and fire it.

Never thought Mom's ceramic shop teachings would be helpful on a gun board LOL
I plan to coat it with urathane.
The Annoyed Man wrote: You'd rather spend $2.99 instead of $35.00? Wassamadayou? "rlol"
I don't know what came over me :lol:

Re: Painting Ceramic for Outdoor Use

Posted: Fri Mar 03, 2017 9:10 pm
by Waco1959
G26ster wrote:What better place to get advice for painting ceramics then from a gun forum :biggrinjester:

If the above is not a good idea, any suggestions for a type of paint to use for outdoor use that will last in our Texas sun and summer heat?
Don't do ceramics but I used to sell paint. If the finish isn't slick just use house paint. If it is slick, use a bonding primer (Kilz outdoor or similar) and then use house paint. I did this with some decorative plant columns and the paint was still on 10 years later.

Re: Painting Ceramic for Outdoor Use

Posted: Fri Mar 03, 2017 9:58 pm
by G26ster
Here's the almost finished (no coating) lighthouse on a very poorly executed Photoshopped background. I really suck at Photoshop :lol: Considering it was all white for 15 years, and ugly, I'm happy now ;-) And good to have the lighthouse back in use, as I don't need no stinkin' ships hitting my garden plants :mrgreen:

Image

Re: Painting Ceramic for Outdoor Use

Posted: Sat Mar 04, 2017 1:07 am
by loktite
lol you have a floating lighthouse!