Natural Paint Products Sewell NJ

Getting ready to sell the house or rent the apartment? Then a gallon of paint and a new roller is the first step. But, before you give up on plans for a new shade in the living room, check out low volatile organic compounds (VOC) options. It’s a better option for you and the environment. Please scroll down to learn more and get access to all the related products and services in Sewell, NJ listed below.

The Home Depot
(856)728-8600
2735 Route 42
Sicklerville, NJ
Hours
Mon-Sat: 6:00am-10:00pm
Sun: 8:00am-8:00pm

The Home Depot
(856)464-1247
320 Bridgeton Pike
Mantua, NJ
Hours
Mon-Sat: 6:00am-10:00pm
Sun: 8:00am-8:00pm

The Home Depot
(856)547-9600
310 Whitehorse Pike
Lawnside, NJ
Hours
Mon-Sat: 6:00am-10:00pm
Sun: 8:00am-8:00pm

The Home Depot
(856)317-2001
2160 Route 70 West
Cherry Hill, NJ
Hours
Mon-Sat: 6:00am-10:00pm
Sun: 8:00am-8:00pm

The Home Depot
(215)218-0600
1651 S Columbus Blvd
Philadelphia, PA
Hours
Mon-Sat: 6:00am-10:00pm
Sun: 8:00am-8:00pm

Exotic Woods Company
(856) 728-5555
444 Erial-Williamstown Road P.O. Box 532
Sicklerville, NJ

Data Provided by:
The Home Depot
(856)374-7700
1370 Hurffville Rd
Deptford, NJ
Hours
Mon-Sat: 6:00am-10:00pm
Sun: 8:00am-8:00pm

The Home Depot
(856)719-0335
116 Walker Avenue
West Berlin, NJ
Hours
Mon-Sat: 6:00am-10:00pm
Sun: 8:00am-8:00pm

The Home Depot
(215)551-1753
2200 Oregon Avenue
Philadelphia, PA
Hours
Mon-Sat: 6:00am-10:00pm
Sun: 8:00am-8:00pm

The Home Depot
(610)532-6884
300 Macdade Blvd
Folsom, PA
Hours
Mon-Sat: 6:00am-10:00pm
Sun: 8:00am-8:00pm

Data Provided by:

Low VOC: The Fresher Coat of Paint

Low VOC: The Fresher Coat of Paint

September 5, 2009   Alli Marshall

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For many of us, a fresh coat of paint equals clean and new. Think about it: When you get ready to sell the house or rent the apartment, a gallon of paint and a new roller is the first step. Want to change the look or the mood or a room? Head down to the paint counter for a colorful bouquet of sample chips: The wet splat of the brush and heady acrylic scent of tint is filled with promise.

Unfortunately, it’s also filled with low-level toxins. The air inside our houses can be three times more polluted than the air outside. According to the EPA, indoor air is considered among the leading five hazards to human health. For many of us, that’s easy enough to shrug off: Open a window until the paint dries, right? But for those with health concerns, allergies or breathing problems, that might not be good enough. Those toxins — which come from the solvent that sticks the paint pigment to your walls and then evaporates — linger long past the new paint smell. In fact, household paints and finishes emit low level toxins into the air for years after application. For children (and what’s a major step in readying a nursery? New paint!) this can present a greater danger.

But, before you give up on plans for a new shade in the living room, check out low volatile organic compounds (VOC) options.

What the heck is low VOC paint, anyway? While volatile organic compounds used to be integral to paint performance, the demand for healthy and environmentally-conscious products have resulted in the development of low VOC, zero VOC and natural paints.

Natural paints are made from ingredients like water, plant oils, resins, essential oils, clay, chalk, talcum, milk casein, natural latex, bees’ wax and mineral and plant dyes.

Zero VOC describes any paint with fewer than 5 grams of volatile organic compounds per liter. (Web site www.eartheasy.com notes that adding a tint to a zero VOC paint brings the level up to a still-low 10 grams/liter.)

Low VOC paints use water in place of petroleum-based solvents and contain very low levels (if any) of heavy metals and formaldehyde. Though the level of VOCs can vary, to meet EPA standards they must remain below 200 grams per liter.

Why buy low VOC paint? Professional painter Tom Rioux could answer that question: He was in recovery from Wegener’s granulomatosis, a debilitating respiratory disease brought on by exposure to hazardous chemicals, when he created Earth Paint. The Asheville-based company now sells a dozen paints, plasters, solvents and finishes, all from healthy materials. Rioux’s credo: If his young son can be in the lab while he’s making a product, then it’s not a product Earth Paint will carry.

Even for healthy adults, low- and no-VOC paint is a good idea. Avoid potential long-ter...

Click here to read the rest of this article from The Lazy Environmentalist