![]() Everyone on here who immediately defaults to pointing the finger at a shoddy builder/defective product scenario isn't helping you get this thing fixed. You can expect paint failure on drywall around tubs, it's just a chronically wet area and the paint bond and condition of the drywall will no doubt be compromised and it will continue to be a point of maintenance for the life of the job. Your last post holds a clue to the problem in the garage. Every pseduo-expet on here immediately plays the phantom moisture/mold card. best of luck.ĭon't go tearing everything apart. apply paint to your leisure, and hope the problem is fixed.if it fails again then look for leaks and other problems. Is the water spigot leaking or dripping condensation on the paint? - if you don't want to investigate, I would start by removing ALL the paint in the problem areas right down to the drywall.then buy a HIGH QUALITY primer and re prime the problem areas. Bathroom paint should be kitchen and bath paint, alkyd, garage (depends if it is maintained at a fairly consistent temp). after re reading OP - does rather sound like poor priming job, maybe wrong type of paint was used in the bathroom and garage. Unless it is just a poor paint job - hard to know without being there and seeing the symptoms. ![]() Could be ventilation issue, built up moisture escaping from the vapor barrier.Seriously no way to know unless you investigate. Sounds like the paper could be separating from the sheet rock, else water moisture is somehow permeating into the paint and raising it off of the sheet rock. Bad paint and primer, or lack of wiping/cleaning the drywall before painting usually results in flaking though, not really bubbling - in my opinion, which is definitely not infallible, I think bubbling is a result of moisture.
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