Size Matters

For our family room painting project, we purchased a 5 gallon bucket rather than several 1 gallon cans of paint.  Why?  It’s cheaper to buy in bulk and we knew we would be using most of it because we were painting two large rooms.  Buying in bulk can backfire, though.  A great deal on a jumbo package of breakfast pastries is not such a great deal if half of them spoil before you can eat them. 

A 5 gallon bucket is extremely unwieldy.  I should’ve guessed this when I saw Robert the paint guy use a dolly to bring the giant bucket of interior eggshell base to the paint center for mixing.  I strained to get it into the trunk of my car, and I strained to get it out of the trunk of my car.  I felt like a competitor in the World’s Strongest Man competition as I hoisted it and shuffled from the garage to the family room with veins bulging from my neck.  I struggled to pry the lid off only to discover that it had to be stirred — and stirring was no easy task for that volume of paint.  And pouring from the bucket to a paint tray?  Not an option. 

The bottom line is, the big bucket is hard to handle and extremely messy.  It is about $2 cheaper per gallon than buying individual gallon cans, so we saved about $10 altogether.  Was it worth it?  No way, Jose.  I wasted a lot of time trying to figure out what to do with this big heavy bucket, and I probably spilled $10 worth of paint over the course of the project anyway.  Unless you are a body builder who doesn’t mind messes, I’d shell out the extra cash for smaller cans.  But that’s just me.

Luckily, the bucket is about half empty now . . . because we finally finished painting the last corner of the family room.  We’re still putting the pieces back together, so the final “after” pictures will have to wait.

familyroomfinalcorner2 familyroomfinalcorner1 familyroomfinalcorner3

Now, on to the kitchen . . .

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