Painting Over Oil Paint.
A large number of homes built here in North and West Vancouver ( all
area's actually) from 1980 back have been painted with some oil paint.
Baseboards, doors, window sills, bathrooms and garage entrances as an example
are the normal areas where they used oil paint. This is actually a good
thing (providing it is lead free of course) because in my opinion oil paint
is a smoother and more durable finish for those areas. However, in
my experience I have seen a lot of painters or people paint latex paint
directly over oil paint with no knowledge or "remorse" for the client
or job preparation. If you have ever noticed painted areas that scratch
easily, it is most likely because the surface wasn't scuffed and or re
primed for the latex to adhere to the old oil finish. It takes time to
do things right so don't be fooled by a cheap and fast quote. People paint
over many things without even checking if its oil or latex. There
is a shortage of "professional painters" out there. I've worked for
companies that don't care about doing things right. It's all about
the money.
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Two ways to deal with this. Paint oil with oil again or re prime
with an alkyd paint and then you can go over it with a quality latex.
I personally feel base boards, window sills , door casing and definitely
interior exterior steel doors look better and last much longer when painted
in oil paint. Oil doesn't scrape off as easily from keys in
hand, vacuum cleaning along baseboards, dogs scratching on doors etc.