You know that elusive concept of a 'perfect' paint or stain. It comes up in conversation from time to time, when contractors remember how good a certain product use to be. In the painting world a perfect trim paint was oil based paints prior to the 80's - Benjamin Moore was considered a perfect house paint 15-20 years ago - not that they're bad now. But there is always a product and period of time it existed that gives it this 'perfect' status. Even on this forum - as bad as ATO is now, everyone always goes back to the memory of ATO as being a standard in decking stain excellence back when it was a good product. So my question is, do any of you have a 'perfect' stain in your arsenal now? And if not - what do think of as a perfect stain in your opinion - a certain brand and time frame when it was excellent - it had all or pretty close to all the attributes that you wanted and if they could just go back to selling that formula again - everything in the world would be right again.
You know that elusive concept of a 'perfect' paint or stain. It comes up in conversation from time to time, when contractors remember how good a certain product use to be. In the painting world a perfect trim paint was oil based paints prior to the 80's - Benjamin Moore was considered a perfect house paint 15-20 years ago - not that they're bad now. But there is always a product and period of time it existed that gives it this 'perfect' status. Even on this forum - as bad as ATO is now, everyone always goes back to the memory of ATO as being a standard in decking stain excellence back when it was a good product. So my question is, do any of you have a 'perfect' stain in your arsenal now? And if not - what do think of as a perfect stain in your opinion - a certain brand and time frame when it was excellent - it had all or pretty close to all the attributes that you wanted and if they could just go back to selling that formula again - everything in the world would be right again.
Share this post
Link to post
Share on other sites