Solving Exterior Mildew ProblemsSupport2021-05-17T09:40:39-04:00
MILDEW
Black, gray or brown areas of fungus growth on the surface of paint or caulk.
POSSIBLE CAUSES:
- Forms most often on areas that tend to be damp, and receive little or no direct sunlight (walls with a northerly exposure and the underside of eaves are particularly vulnerable).
- Use of a lower quality paint, which may have an insufficient amount of mildewcide.
- Failure to prime bare wood before painting.
- Painting over a substrate or coating on which mildew has not been removed.
SOLUTION:
- Test to distinguish mildew from dirt by applying a few drops of household bleach to the discolored area; if it disappears, it is probably mildew.
- Treat the mildew by applying a mixture of water and bleach, 3:1, and leave on for 20 minutes, applying more as it dries.
- Wear goggles and rubber gloves. Then scrub and rinse the area.
- Apply an exterior latex primer, then a top-of- the-line exterior latex paint in flat, satin, semigloss or gloss finish, depending on the desired appearance.
Note: Images & information provided by The Rohm & Hass Paint Quality Institute.