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Young House Love » Favorites » How To Paint Your Front Door

| By Sherry Petersik | August 16, 2011 | 556 Comments

How To Paint Your Front Door

We’re back as promised with the whole front door shebang.

how-to-paint-your-front-door

First, here’s what we started with:

FrntDr Before Screen Door

Yup, it was an old maroon storm door with three issues: 1) the grids didn’t match up with the six paneled door behind it, 2) it was always jamming, and 3) it didn’t latch closed very well, so it would bang open in a storm.

It was nothing but a nuisance to us, so we opted to go storm-doorless (just like we chose to do in our first house) since we didn’t use it once in eight whole months (we have a screen/storm door on the side of the house that we occasionally use along with screen doors in the living room and sunroom that we use a lot more often). It’s definitely not a choice that everyone would make, but we’re psyched to go storm-door-less so we can appreciate our awesome six-paneled solid wood door that was hiding behind it:

FrntDr Before Open

So off came all the hardware that held our slammy-jammy storm door in place. Then all we needed to do was spackle those holes and use some exterior paint to touch up the trim (thank goodness the previous owners left that in the basement for us).

FrntDr Hardware Removed

Oh but before we did any spackling we got to the fun part: picking the paint color. We held up a ton of options in all colors of the rainbow (plum, turquoise, navy, lime green, and beyond), but kept coming back to a happy yellow color. Here are the final four contenders (they look pretty similar in this pic but they varied slightly by how much white or orange they had in them). After looking at them in all types of light (morning sun, afternoon shade, artificial porch light at night, etc) we ended up choosing the top one: Full Sun EB1-1 by Valspar’s Eddie Bauer Home collection.

FrntDr Paint Yellow Swatche

But removing the screen door and spackling & painting the trim wasn’t the only prep task we took on. We also decided that our awesome original door knocker (which was rusting and peeling) could use some love.

FrntDr Before Door Knocker

So we carefully removed it with the hope of bringing it back to its former glory and reinstalling it on our bright yellow door when we were finished painting.

FrntDr Door Knocker Gone

Then we sanded the paint around those areas, just to get everything nice and smooth.

We also opted to remove the rusting brass plate on the bottom of the door and spackle and sand those holes. We didn’t have one in our first house and prefer the uninterrupted look of one big boldly colored wood door (but it’s definitely another one of those personal preference things like nixing a storm door). Oh and we also took off our door handle and lock too – since we had hopes of sprucing them up while they were removed like the door knocker.

FrntDr Kick Plate Removed

And now for a shot of sunshine in a can:

FrntDr Valspar Can

We mentioned that we chose Full Sun EB1-1 by Valspar’s Eddie Bauer Home collection as “the one.” So we talked to the paint pro at Lowe’s about what exterior primer + paint she would recommend (sadly none of which are no-VOC yet). She recommended Valspar’s Duramax since it has a built-in primer and is formulated to be extra durable since it’s exposed to the elements outside. So we had her color match our Full Sun paint chip to the Valspar Duramax stuff and grabbed a quart of it in semi-gloss finish for around $15.

Oh but before we applied a single coat we used a liquid deglosser (Next Liquid Deglosser by Crown since it’s non-flammable, biodegradable, and low-VOC) to remove any oil, grease, or other paint-adhesion-saboteurs (I’ve never typed that word, and I have to admit I liked it). Basically it’s a shortcut when you don’t feel like sanding something you’re about to paint (albeit not as thorough, but usually good enough to get ‘er done). You do definitely want to sand any areas that aren’t smooth before deglossing though (like the nail holes from the brass plate and other places we removed hardware or spackled) since liquid deglossers don’t smooth things, they just remove residue that might mess with paint adhesion.

Then it was time for coat one of our yellow primer + paint, applied with a small foam roller (to cut down on brush strokes) and a 2″ angled brush (to get into the frames of the six paneled door). Of course one coat didn’t do the trick, but for yellow paint going over deep maroon it was actually a pretty impressive showing for just one thin coat:

FrntDr One Coat

And four thin and even coats later (yes, there I go with the “thin and even” thing again), honey was looking miiiighty fine:

FrntDr After

As in, I couldn’t stop staring at her and smiling. So glad we chose such a happy color to wake up our drab brick and cream wood-sidinged exterior. And it looks just as cute from the inside as it does from the outside:

FrntDr After Inside

Mmm, glossy yellowy goodness. It came out really smoothly, partially I think due to using good exterior paint, and partially due to those thin and even coats that were carefully applied with a small foam roller and high quality 2″ angled brush. Not globbing it on (and waiting for each coat to dry before moving onto the next paper thin one) is the key to no visible brush strokes when things dry.

FrntDr After From Below

Oh yeah, and you might notice the hardware is all sorts of spruced up. We’ll be back with a dedicated hardware-upgrade post full of photos and instructions when it comes to that part of the process (there are too many pics and not enough time to squeeze that in here).

FrntDr After Door Knocker

FrntDr After Doorknob

In the meantime, here’s the door from outside (I couldn’t completely close it for pics because it was still drying – but if you paint something in the morning, by evening it should be all cured up and ready to close).

FrntDr After Straight

Isn’t our porch happier without the old broken maroon screen door + dark hidden front door combo?

FrntDr After Whole Porch

Shucks, it just makes me giddy. And John loves it too. Oh happy day.

FrntDr After Plant Foregrou

So there it is. A front door makeover that involved:

  1. checking out swatches taped on the door at all times of day (to ensure nothing would change from something we love in morning sunlight to something we hate in evening porch light)
  2. removing the screen door and spackling/sanding/painting those holes left in the door surround
  3. removing the hardware and sanding those areas to smooth them before painting
  4. permanently removing a rusted brass plate at the bottom of the door and spackling/sanding those holes
  5. thoroughly deglossing the entire door
  6. refurbishing the hardware (we’ll be back with all those details for ya soon)
  7. applying four thin and even coats of exterior primer + paint in semi-gloss for a nice shiny finish
  8. reattaching the hardware when the paint was dry enough (but not completely closing the door until evening, so it can fully cure)

Woot. Love it. As for the budget breakdown, whoop, here it is: one quart of Valspar Duramax paint in semi-gloss from Lowe’s: $15. Das it. Oh and if someone didn’t have spackle and a deglosser on hand those might be around $4 each on top of the cost of a quart of paint. We still have tons of paint leftover bee tee dubs, so a quart for a front door should definitely do it – even if you’re painting both sides of it (we left the back of ours white like our interior doors).

Have any of you recently painted your front door? Any plans to if you haven’t? Is it crazy that this is the fourth time I’ve painted a door in five years (and the second time I’ve gone with a happy yellow color)? It’s just so dang cheerful. Here’s hoping it spurs us on when it comes to about a million other exterior upgrades that we want slash need to tackle (including the possibility of painting the cream siding around the door, and even trying something with the brick exterior down the line). I guess time will tell where we’ll end up with that stuff. But you know we’ll keep you posted…

Update: There were a bunch of requests for some wider shots from the curb, so here they are. Remember that nearly everything else in the pics besides the yellow door might be on our change-that list down the line (so it’s all a work in progress)…

Door Far2

… especially the big barricade o’ bushes that makes the door nearly invisible from certain angles…

Door Far11

Wouldn’t the power to move bushes with the point of a finger be an awesome superpower? Methinks I’d pick that over flying and reading minds.

More posts from Young House Love

Filed Under: Favorites, Home Improvement, Our Second House, Outside, Painting

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Comments

  1. Lauren says

    September 19, 2012 at 8:15 pm

    My front door needs a fresh coat of paint… I knew I could find some great tips here! :)

    I’m planning to use the same color that’s already on the door (it’s just looking a little worn). Would you still use the deglosser on a door that’s already been painted or did you just do that because your door was wood and probably had some kind of varnish on it?

    Reply
    • YoungHouseLove says

      September 19, 2012 at 9:06 pm

      Oh yes, I’d do that just to clean things off so the fresh paint sticks onto the old stuff.

      xo
      s

  2. Kathy says

    September 21, 2012 at 9:46 pm

    Did you paint the back of your door too?

    Reply
    • YoungHouseLove says

      September 21, 2012 at 10:26 pm

      The back is white and the front is yellow. Hope it helps!

      xo
      s

  3. Michelle says

    September 23, 2012 at 3:57 pm

    I’ve been thinking about painting our front door…just worried about painting it while its still attached, although I definitely don’t want to take it down either. Did you have any problems with bugs in the house since you had to leave it open all day? Or with stuff (from outside) getting stuck in the paint while it was still wet?

    Reply
    • YoungHouseLove says

      September 24, 2012 at 12:20 am

      Nah, if you use thin and even coats of paint it dries faster and we kept it almost all the way closed between coats (just cracked so the painted edges wouldn’t get marred) so it worked out well. Hope it helps!

      xo
      s

  4. Chanda says

    September 23, 2012 at 6:33 pm

    Thanks for the inspiration! Yellow door, check! Refinished hardware, check! Now I want to refinish all the door handles in my house!

    Reply
  5. Michelle White says

    September 27, 2012 at 11:49 am

    Sweet! I’m looking forward to doing it! Thanks for the inspiration!

    Reply
  6. SHERRY says

    October 9, 2012 at 4:37 pm

    LOVE THE DOOR, BUT WAS SURPRISED THAT YOU DID NOT TAKE IT DOWN AND PAIT IT. GUESS IT DOES NOT MATTER THAT THE BOTTOM WAS NOT PAINTED, NO ONE REALLY CAN SEE IT RIGHT? JUST HAD TO TAPE AROUND THE HINGES?

    Reply
    • YoungHouseLove says

      October 9, 2012 at 4:43 pm

      Yup, just tape around the hinges and take off the hardware of you’d like (knobs, etc) and you’re good to go!

      xo
      s

  7. Patty says

    October 27, 2012 at 3:40 pm

    I’ve been considering painting our front door also. My question is our door is metal not wood. What type of paint and prep should we do for that type of door?

    Reply
    • YoungHouseLove says

      October 27, 2012 at 6:55 pm

      Same exact dealio (we’ve done metal doors the same way)! Hope it helps.

      xo
      s

  8. Erin says

    November 28, 2012 at 11:22 am

    Thanks for the great info! I’m going to redo our front door next spring. Did you guys paint the back of the door too?

    Reply
    • YoungHouseLove says

      November 28, 2012 at 11:39 am

      We left that white like all of the interior doors. Hope it helps!

      xo
      s

  9. HarriDec says

    February 2, 2013 at 7:52 am

    Nice results. Did you also paint the inside of the door yellow? I notice that you painted both edges.

    Reply
    • YoungHouseLove says

      February 2, 2013 at 8:25 am

      I just painted the edges since they had been the color on the front of the door and we wanted to cover the brown. So the back stayed white :)

      xo
      s

  10. Margo says

    February 8, 2013 at 1:47 pm

    Did you paint the backside of the door also?

    Reply
    • YoungHouseLove says

      February 8, 2013 at 2:59 pm

      The back stayed white but the front and inside edge went yellow since those used to be brown.

      xo
      s

  11. Christina @ Homemade Ocean says

    February 26, 2013 at 4:17 pm

    I am still so in love with this color! You could not have made a better choice!!!

    SOMETHING in my house needs this sunny makeover :)

    Reply
    • YoungHouseLove says

      February 26, 2013 at 5:40 pm

      Aw thanks Christina!

      xo
      s

  12. Asheville Painting says

    March 25, 2013 at 8:46 pm

    This was great. I love it. I like the newly painted door.

    Reply
  13. natalie says

    April 30, 2013 at 11:05 am

    your door looks lovely! i’m also in love with your living room wall color, do you happen to remember what color that is?

    Reply
    • YoungHouseLove says

      April 30, 2013 at 11:24 am

      The wall color behind the door is Moonshine by Benjamin Moore.

      -John

  14. Tammy says

    June 13, 2013 at 10:40 am

    Hi been wanting to paint my front door can’t decide on what color please help :-( the in side of my house color is a relaxing green mint color. Any ideas will help I love getting ideas from different people helps me decide much faster.

    Reply
    • YoungHouseLove says

      June 13, 2013 at 10:43 am

      Maybe a rich plum color? That always looks fun with mint.

      xo
      s

  15. Emily says

    July 14, 2013 at 1:51 pm

    Today I attempted to paint all of our exterior doors using your post as a guide, but ended up with tons and tons of tiny bubbles. When I googled around it looks like a lot of people say that the foam roller is the culprit. Any thoughts?

    Reply
    • YoungHouseLove says

      July 14, 2013 at 9:46 pm

      I’ve heard that too! I don’t know if it’s the combo of the roller with thinner paint (there are theories that a roller can rile up paint and cause bubbles a lot if the paint is thin) so perhaps that’s it? Temperature also can do it (was it exceptionally hot or humid today?). I would sand just the bubbles down lightly and then use a brush to apply the paint, but of course with the brush some folks complain of brush strokes (super thin and even coats are key – I just painted the front door with a brush only but did really light coats and it looks great). Hope it helps!

      xo
      s

  16. Lindsay says

    August 22, 2013 at 4:28 pm

    The top 1/2 of our front door is glass (window) but is outdated. I’d love to find somewhere where we can just buy a new glass part to put in the door, rather than replacing the entire door itself to update it. Any idea where you can get something like that? I’ve looked online but not even sure what to call it! thx!

    Reply
    • YoungHouseLove says

      August 22, 2013 at 6:10 pm

      I would check out a glass company (just google for one in your area or check the yellow pages) – they can make custom pieces of glass and sometimes it’s not too pricey!

      xo
      s

  17. Shanna says

    November 11, 2013 at 3:53 pm

    Hi! I know this is an older post, but I just repainted my front door yesterday following your tutorial and I’m looking for some advice.

    I ended up doing 4 coats (bright blue/teal over what was a maroon door) using a foam roller (and 2″ angled brush as needed). Today it’s all dry and I can see some of the trail of the foam roller, especially at the top half of the door. Any suggestions? I’m wondering if I should go back over with one more coat and try to be meticulous about it being evenly and thinly applied. Should I use just a brush this time and not the roller? Also, I’ve never used exterior paint before, but it’s definitely thicker than what I’m used to and I wonder if that might be part of it.

    Reply
    • YoungHouseLove says

      November 11, 2013 at 3:55 pm

      Yes, I’d try going over it one more time if you’re unhappy with it and just do a super thin and even coat (exterior paint does tend to be thicker/trickier). You can try a brush (a thin coat is key!) but you might see brush strokes, so in that case, just follow that with a foam roller to get it even more thinly and evenly applied. Hope it helps!

      xo
      s

  18. Krista says

    July 9, 2014 at 12:31 am

    I loved your yellow door so much, I did mine.
    It really pops with black porch furniture and yellow pillows and flowers. Was going to post a pix but couldn’t figure it out, thanks for the inspiration! Love it!

    Reply
    • YoungHouseLove says

      July 9, 2014 at 9:38 am

      I love hearing that! So glad, Krista! As for sharing pics, if you upload something to a free site like Flickr or Pinterest you an link to it in the comments :)

      xo
      s

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John and Sherry Sitting On Woven ChairHey, we’re John & Sherry. We’ve fixed up 7 homes, written books, designed products, started a podcast, and then downsized & moved to the beach! Here you’ll find over 3,000 DIY projects & home updates. More about us…
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