apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


CHI Good Questions: How To Remove Paint From a Textured Window?

2008-04-02-paintedwindow1.jpg
Julie sent in a question for the crowd: I recently moved into a lovely old New Orleans apartment. The bathroom has has a wonderful window that fills the room with soft, warm light, but as you can see, it was painted sloppily and needs some cleaning up. The glass is textured with a raised pattern that makes it impossible for me to scrape using a razor blade. Can anyone recommend an effective way to remove paint from a textured windowpane? I have included photos of the bathroom and a close up of the window. Thanks for your help, AT!

(Note: Include a pic of your problem and your question gets posted first.
Email questions and pics
with QUESTIONS in subject line to:
chicago(at)apartmenttherapy(dot)com)

 
 

2008-04-01-paintedwindow2.jpg

Anyone have good advice for Julie? Please let her know in the comments below...

Tags

painting, fixing & repair, Good Questions, How To...

Related Links

Share

Comments (22)

My advice would be to use a liquid paint stripper. Paint it on and then use a wet cloth & nailbrush or toothbrush to remove it once the paint starts to peel. Wear gloves, make sure there is lots of ventilation, and rinse it well with clean water when you are finished. Great windows!

posted by maggieann on April 1st 2008 at 12:50pm
view maggieann's profile

If it's a glass window you can carefully use a paint stripper and wipe the paint right off with a rag and a brush to get in all the grooves. I suggest something water soluble and low fume, maybe SoyGel by Franmar Chemical.

posted by skreinking on April 1st 2008 at 12:50pm
view skreinking's profile

I wish I had something postive to contribute but I had that (much smaller paint drip) on a window and absolutely nothing I tried got it off. We tried thinners, vinegar, heat (hair dryer) and even nail polish remover and nothing worked. We sold the house with it there but if we had not sold I was going to replace the glass because it bothered me so much to look at it.

posted by Gallivant on April 1st 2008 at 12:50pm
view Gallivant's profile

I haven't used it on textured glass, but I bet SoyGel would do the trick. Hasn't disappointed me yet! (But use two layers of blue painter's tape on the areas you want to keep the paint on - with one layer it can warp if you leave the SoyGel on too long)

posted by apaulldp on April 1st 2008 at 12:51pm
view apaulldp's profile

If it's latex paint, steel wool or an SOS pad and patience.

posted by patrick (the other one) on April 1st 2008 at 12:56pm
view patrick (the other one)'s profile

I still find it mind blowing that anyone would have painted this sloppily and thought it was OK.

I go along with the others in suggesting a water based stripper, and plan to (carefully) repaint the entire window.

posted by Devyn on April 1st 2008 at 12:58pm
view Devyn's profile

I like Goof Off! Easy-peasy.

posted by darcidoodle on April 1st 2008 at 12:58pm
view darcidoodle's profile

I'd go with heat - though you'll need something that gets hotter than a hair dryer. I have a heat stripper I bought years ago that works like magic - the paint bubbles right up and can be peeled up.

Chemicals might work - but yuck.

posted by nikkicole on April 1st 2008 at 1:32pm
view nikkicole's profile

There's always if the x-acto route if all else fails (for a few small areas only).

posted by dn on April 1st 2008 at 1:34pm
view dn's profile

Sparkle glass cleaner and a tooth brush...I don't know whats in Sparkle but it gets latex paint off everything. I know I sound like the father in that "Greek Wedding" film but really it works!

posted by pixelsupply on April 1st 2008 at 1:36pm
view pixelsupply's profile

If it's an acrylic based paint, 100% pure acetone nail polish remover will remove it. Target usually carries it, and pick up some Q-tips too. The only pain is that you have to re-cap every time you wet the cotton swabs, or it will quickly evaporate.

posted by maude on April 1st 2008 at 1:40pm
view maude's profile

I'd try a product called "goof off." You'd have to let it soak in a bit. And appy with a small brush -- don't spray.

posted by kimg924 on April 1st 2008 at 1:51pm
view kimg924's profile

Magic eraser - which I heard about onan AT post

posted by Lesley - London on April 1st 2008 at 2:35pm
view Lesley - London's profile

Citrus stripper! non toxic, decent smelling and can be used indoors no problem. That, a toothbrush and some old towel and paper towels will do the trick. I just used it on a 4 ft square window that we'd removed that had 5-6 layers of exterior paint that had dripped behind the (failing) quarter round. I did it in the house, worked great on a combo of oil and latex and it was about 50 years worth. took about a half hour.

good luck!

posted by janicea on April 1st 2008 at 3:12pm
view janicea's profile

I'm a New Orleans resident and this is something we all face at one point or another in an apartment here. In the past, nail polish remover has worked for me, followed by wiping down the glass with a wet cloth to remove the residue. Repeat if necessary. On the subject, are the windows completely painted shut? About 75% of the windows in my Uptown apartment will NEVER be opened because my silly landlord has had this place painted over and over and over, and the windows were never protected.

posted by kmnola on April 1st 2008 at 3:29pm
view kmnola's profile

Mid City resident here. We have the exact same situation and feel that we just have to replace the glass. New glazing is really going to make it look fresh. I hope it's done before JazzFest.

posted by cassbass on April 1st 2008 at 3:39pm
view cassbass's profile

It makes me CRAZY when people do stuff like this! What is the point of painting in the first place if you're going to do a crappy job of it? And what is going on in someone's mind to think this is ok??? I'm....just....baffled.

posted by nazrd on April 1st 2008 at 4:42pm
view nazrd's profile

DO NOT USE HEAT ON THE GLASS!

Your best best is a liquid paint stripper and elbow grease.

Circa 1850 makes a decent, non toxic stripper.

posted by Michael Bailey on April 1st 2008 at 4:45pm
view Michael Bailey's profile

I agree with the Mr.Clean Magic Eraser. It's a thing of magic.

posted by lbcsquirrel on April 1st 2008 at 5:45pm
view lbcsquirrel's profile

Don't use heat - Michael Bailey is right. It could cause old glass like that to crack.

posted by sunspot42 on April 2nd 2008 at 9:09am
view sunspot42's profile

If you do use a heat gun be very careful, the heat will crack the glass in no time, seconds if left in one one spot too long, I know all too well, use a small fine wire brush or steel wool on the frosted/textured glass you'll never see any small scratches that may occur this will loosen and remove some of the paint , then go with a gel stripper so it will stay in place, unless you take the door off the hinges and lay it down and strip that way.

posted by think pink on April 2nd 2008 at 11:07am
view think pink's profile

magic eraser will haze clear glass.

nail polish remover worked for me, along with some elbow grease and a toothbrush.

thanks for this post! The paint's been driving me nuts for two years, was afraid I'd have to get curtains, which are otherwise totally unnecessary!

posted by erica on April 3rd 2008 at 10:22am
view erica's profile