Nicole said

Removing paint from interior of cheap clay pot

Curious if anyone has any tips for removing paint from the interior of clay pots. I bought some from Ali Express – cheap as dirt and I didn’t expect them to be anything special but I also didn’t expect them to be painted on the inside. I’m not sure if there’s even anything to be concerned about but I’d rather have the paint off than on. May be that these just become decorations but thought I’d check here for expertise. :)

12 Replies

Sanding is probably best, but it’ll be messy, difficult and not that effective. Anything chemical paint remover would season the pot for paint remover, yum.

I have one of those junky pots, and I demoted mine to decoration. Even if you get the paint off, they were covering the clay for a reason, it’s probably crap.

Nicole said

That was my initial thought – that the clay was not very good. And honestly, with what I paid for them I didn’t expect anything better quality. Eh. They look cute. :)

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Use them as planters if they are big enough. Or make your own bonsai…

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Cwyn said

I’ve done it using a Dremel tool and yeah paint thinner. Takes awhile to get the thinner out afterward. Can’t recommend it to anyone because of the health risks but I did it anyway. Pot is fine now. It is a softer clay so low temp greens are best in it.

Nicole said

Your experience is actually one of the first things that comes up when you google “removing paint from inside of clay tea pot” ;)

Cwyn said

Oh how funny. Lol.

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Dr Jim said

If the clay is too porous it may absorb too much tea or even seep. This may be why it was painted in the first place.

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Nicole said

thanks for the input, all!

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Mine luckily was not entirely painted on the inside, just very splotchily painted, what I did was boil it A LOT, several times in water, then with baking soda, then I scoured it with steel wool and baking soda, then I boiled it a few times in vinegar, then I boiled it again about a half a dozen times.

All told took me about a week of working with the blasted thing, but it is in theory usable now. At least I use it, I seasoned it for Shang’s tangerine blossom red and it works fine.

At the very least I do not think I have poisoned myself, and I was too stubborn to use it as anything other than a pot :P

Nicole said

Hm. These aren’t entirely painted either. This sounds less poisonous than paint thinner. But I may not have the energy to do it to pots that didn’t cost me even $20. :) I might though. They are pretty cool. Thanks, Amanda.

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Did you do this yet?

One time I blasted paint off a patio using a water blaster. (That was in California, long before the drought. Those were the days.)

Anyways, I wonder if there’s a small, handheld version of this that you can use. Water pressure is very effective!

Nicole said

I’ll look into that! I started this morning trying Amanda’s boil/vinegar/baking soda but I only had a toothbrush, no steel wool. After about 5 hours of boil/scrub/repeat, I quit for the day. No progress. Gotta get steel wool tomorrow.

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