Workshop Projects

Req 3d — Painting and Varnishing

3d.
Paint or varnish a piece of furniture, a door, or trim on a house.

A bad paint job is easy to spot: drips, brush marks, missed edges, dust stuck in the finish, or a surface that starts peeling early. A good finish looks smooth because most of the work happened before the paint or varnish went on.

Refurbishing a Table (video)
Refurbishing a Table (video)
3 BIG Door Painting Mistakes DIYers Don't Know They're Making (video)

Prep Is the Real Project

Before finishing a surface, you often need to:

Paint covers the surface with color and protection. Varnish or a clear finish protects the material while letting the grain show through. In either case, neat prep leads to neat results.

A Better Finish Checklist

Simple habits that improve the final look
  • Start with a clean, dry surface.
  • Use thin, even coats instead of heavy ones.
  • Watch edges and corners where drips often form.
  • Let each coat dry as directed before adding the next.
  • Inspect in good light so you catch misses before cleanup.

Painting and varnishing teach patience. If you rush drying time or slap on thick coats, the result often looks worse than before you started.