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Painting with Colored Cement

Painting with Colored Cement
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This deals with the use of colored cement as a paint to colorize cement structures. 
 
Humidity passing through a cement roof can cause ceiling paint to blister and peel.  Not so with colored cement, which sticks like crazy to cement, even wet.  With luck, an interior cement "paint" job is a lifetime paint job. 

On the outside, cement paint helps seal cracks. 
 
I use a pressure sprayer for preliminary cleaning.    

One interesting advantage to using cement as paint is that spiders appear to not like raw cement.  There are very few spider webs where surfaces are painted with cement.  If you paint them with house paint, the spiders come.  Some insects (butterflies?) taste through their feet, I think.  Although not insects, that may explain why spiders don't like to hang out on raw cement.  Whatever the reason, fewer spiders in the house is good.  Fewer cobwebs to clean results in less time spent cleaning. 

 
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Step 1Materials

Materials
The basic materials needed are cement and pigments to colorize the cement.  Concrete acrylic fortifier can also be added to improve bonding and perhaps weather resistance on exterior surfaces.  I'm not sure if adding acrylic fortifier decreases the spider-repelling properties of the cement.  For interior painting it may not be as important to use it, anyway.

I use both regular gray Portland cement and white cement, depending on the colors I am after.  For darker colors, I use gray cement.  The more pigment you use, the more intense the colors will be.  The cement is the binder, though, so an excess of pigment could mean not enough binder and result in a chalky surface. 

Pigments for cement come in liquid and powder form.  I prefer the dry powder form, since I can mix the pigments with cement and store them for later use.  (Water in the liquid pigments would harden up the cement.)   One way to mix the different powders is to put them in a closed container, such as a plastic bucket with lid, and shake them. 

Unlike the powdered pigments available from some art supply stores, the pigments from hardware stores are more limited in color, and a lot less expensive.  Red is sort of a "red oxide", yellow is sort of ochre.  There is also a green, blue, and black.   With those basic colors, which are not true primary colors, you can mix a range of colors.  



This Wikipedia link will tell you way more than you need to know about Portland Cement.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portland_cement

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30 comments
Jun 22, 2010. 10:15 PMShandelar says:
My basement is below grade and has a really bad mold problem. I'm looking for a way to fix this without the major expense of excavating and laying drain pipes along the foundation, not to mention ripping out the wallboard. What do you think of the idea of using a not-too-thick layer of painted cement to slather over the wallboard? Would that keep the moisture out?
Oct 14, 2010. 11:38 AMShandelar says:
Thank you. I didn't realize you'd replied until today, almost four months later. I have another question. You said you plastered your underground tunnel with cement. Did you apply cement directly onto packed earth or did you use some intervening building material?
Oct 14, 2010. 4:27 PMShandelar says:
Great photos! I love the skylight and the cat is a really nice touch. :-)
Aug 23, 2010. 11:58 AMgemtree says:
Is there a place to buy the dry pigments cheaply?
Aug 24, 2010. 10:39 PMgemtree says:
Thanks. Are you going to write an instructible for that roller?
Aug 23, 2010. 12:07 PMgemtree says:
Aw, you just saved me HUNDREDS of dollars.
Jul 1, 2010. 8:45 AMjanetsellers08 says:
'what is the wire nest thingy on the roof?
Jul 1, 2010. 10:46 PMjanetsellers08 says:
Wow. Brilliant. Is it a seasonal plant?
May 7, 2010. 7:54 PMwenpherd says:
Wow! thats really cool where is that located? It looks like a tropical rain forest place.
May 7, 2010. 12:07 PMdchall8 says:
Wow!  I had to go read your other cement projects.  Good stuff!! 

How are your zipper steps holding up now that they've gotten some use and some weather? 

I don't see that the fish net you use offers much in the way of anything with the very real exception that when you cover it with a layer of cement, you are guaranteed to have a layer that is as thick as the netting.  Otherwise the coat might be thin and thick in spots. 
May 7, 2010. 7:10 AMNinzerbean says:
 Wow! I love it, this may sound crazy but do you think I could do this to the sidewalk in front of my house?
May 7, 2010. 10:03 AMJayefuu says:
You might get in trouble if it's owned by your local authority...
May 7, 2010. 10:22 AMNinzerbean says:
 I wish, then they would fix it. It's all broken but fixing it up is my responsibility, some people in my neighborhood have bricked theirs. I just cleaned mine in a checkerboard pattern with a pressure washer.
May 9, 2010. 8:02 AMpaganwonder says:
Really nice job with the pressure washer- reminds me of a graffiti project I saw somewhere.  Lucky for me (wife and neighbors would scream) our walks don't discolor so I can't use the front walk for my random rants and political views.
May 9, 2010. 10:56 AMNinzerbean says:
 Thank you, not one single neighbor has said a word about it since I did it (about  9 months ago).
May 9, 2010. 11:02 AMJayefuu says:
Can we have this pattern next time please?!
May 9, 2010. 1:08 PMNinzerbean says:
 I'll have to be more bored but sure, why not?
May 7, 2010. 11:09 AMNachoMahma says:
.  The techniques should work just as well on a sidewalk as on a roof or any outside wall. Pigment choice becomes more important than with inside walls to avoid UV bleaching.
.  Other than adding the pigment(s), follow the same procedures you would use for building any sidewalk (eg, forming, reinforcing, &c).
.  As Thinkenstein points out, too much pigment will probably weaken the concrete.
.
.  BTW, very creative job with the pressure cleaner. Didn't happen to get pics for an iBle did ya?
May 7, 2010. 11:29 AMNinzerbean says:
 Ha ha - dirty side walk + pressure cleaner + being really bored.
May 7, 2010. 10:27 AMJayefuu says:
Ha ha that's amazing!

The phone for your mum works now by the way. Building a case for it this week then submitting it. Should be building a cheaper, more flexible version in the next few months.
May 7, 2010. 10:31 AMNinzerbean says:
 I know we shouldn't be talking here - but when can I get one? She just turned 97 so it's not like she is going to need it for long and then I can give it back to you...

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Author:Thinkenstein
I'm a refugee from Los Angeles, living in backwoods Puerto Rico for about 35 years now and loving it. I built my own home from discarded nylon fishnet and cement.