Home Improvement Asked by JB. With Monica. on April 14, 2021
This is a very expensive acrylic paint, the bucket was not properly closed, and left 1 year in the basement.
Now there is mold inside the bucket ; The strong smell of acrylic has also disappeared.
It doesn’t need to be perfect quality, since I just wanted to finish the painting of the technical room of my house. But well.. brown color spots would certainly look awful on the white walls. (On top of that I could bring mold inside the house..)
Maybe I could filter the paint into another clean bucket, and and try to stir it anyway ? Or this is too dangerous, there was a chemical reaction and my paint is dead ?
Try using a spatula and clean off the moldy area, it might just be some rust, without disturbing the rest of the paint so you don't mix the mold/rust in. Once it's cleaned up, stir the paint and determine if the texture seems right and then paint a scrap piece of wood and see what it looks like. The fact that you don't have the acrylic smell means the chemicals that keep the paint liquid and spreadable have weakened and that's not a good sign. You've waited a year, try a test spot and see what it looks like...
Correct answer by JACK on April 14, 2021
From the dry material on the outside it looks like you have a 5 gallon bucket of primer with about 1 gallon left.
You can see the paint is a bit broken by looking at the watery outside edges. It may be usable still though but it is not going to have the same properties as it was supposed to.
On the rust - not mold - well rust is a pretty damn good coloring agent. It is already in the paint. Probably the best thing to do is find the cleanest side, wipe that side of the inside down really good with paper towel to remove rust and dump this into another bucket that can be stirred.
You will have some rust remnants in your paint and it will not mix exactly even. If the room you are painting is going to be of a lighter color or white there is a very very good chance that the rust coloring will bleed through. (I don't think this will happen - but if there is enough rust bleeding through you might have to go over the whole area in something like Killz to really cover it - this would turn a quick paint job into a mini-disaster)
Verdict: Unless I was doing something like an interior of a shed I would just throw it away. I hate throwing stuff away but I also hate having to redo something and pay for materials to redo something (brushes/rollers/pans). We are talking about ~$10 worth of paint and you will be using ~$10 in materials and your time is worth?
Answered by DMoore on April 14, 2021
Throw it away. If it is mold there is more in there than you can see. You do not want to risk bringing that mold into your home or workspace.
Answered by cigibs on April 14, 2021
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