Answer
Jan 04, 2021 - 03:51 AM
A lot depends on what you are going over specifically. If the furniture is raw and unfinished wood, or something with a glossy or semi-gloss finish you could sand over/lightly abrade/de-gloss so the surface has some teeth that the primer can bond onto (super conditional) - we'd recommend you use the AFM Ecolacq Sandable Primer instead, followed by two coats of Zero VOC paint or Ecolacq or other fine AFM finishing products. Transitional Primer is intended to go over previously painted and cured surfaces, NOT raw wood. If you are going over a laminate surface, then things get dodgier. Critical is getting a surface with some degree of teeth to it so the primer has a surface it can bond too. Laminate tends to be flat and smooth, which is the antithesis of paint and primer. If you are uncertain what you are going over, we sell small samples that you can use for testing to establish whether or not the product will bond well and look good on your project. We strongly recommend you test with a sample first, particularly if you are uncertain what you are going over.
