Around the home, enamel paint is frequently used for appliance finish touch-ups. If you’re in need of a paint that forms a hard shell and provides reliable protection, enamel paint just might be the finish that you need.

What Enamel Paint Is

Enamel paint is defined more by its qualities than by its content. In the broadest sense, enamel paint means any solvent-based paint that dries to a hard, vitreous-like (or, glass-like) shell. Solvent-based paints are also called oil-based paints, in contrast with water-based paints. Enamel paint springboards off root words that refer to smelting or melting. True enamel is a glass coating that is melted or kiln-baked at extremely high temperatures onto metal or ceramics. Yet enamel paint bears little similarity to the enamel of molten glass, as there is no glass content in this kind of paint. Even traditional baked enamel finishes, long used for vehicles, have nothing to do with glass. Baking is simply a fast route to eliminating solvents and VOCs. In reality, air-dry enamel paints are far softer than true enamels formed in a kiln. Paint manufacturers have further widened the definition by sometimes attaching the word enamel to water-based paints, thus losing the one ingredient that usually ties together all enamel paints: solvents.

Enamel Paint’s Origin

As with many home-related products, enamel paint is as much a clever marketing move as it is a physical product. At a time when paints were less than reliable and whitewash paints were friable and known to smudge off, attaching the word “enamel” to a paint imparted great meaning to users in the mid-1800s. Up to the 1840s, enamel paint was thought of in terms of small items like watches and jewelry. In the 1850s and 1860s, enamel paint shifted gears and was promoted as an “anti-corrosion” or “iron preserving agent” for iron railings, wood barns, stone, stucco, fences, and other high-impact outdoor elements. Patented enamel paint in the 1870s made from white lead, linseed oil, and zinc was promoted as nothing less than a miracle coating that could “resist the action of all kinds of weather.” Around the same time, enamel was associated in consumers’ minds with the vitreous shell surfaces of porcelain and ceramic tiles, or of porcelain bathroom fixtures. These are products that many potential buyers knew well from experience. Since porcelain bath fixtures were fairly cutting edge, the concept carried great meaning—even for consumers who didn’t actually own the product. Enamel products were impermeable, sanitary, and very tough. Translating the idea of cookware, tile, sinks, and bathtub enamel to paint was a convenient shortcut to indicate that this paint was equally water-resistant and tough. Powder coating has largely replaced baked enamel coating for industrial applications. However, enamel paint’s main competition came when synthetic latex paints were introduced after World War II. Today, enamel paint still has some associations with hard-shelled items such as large appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, though these too are now powder-coated.

Where to Use Enamel Paint

Brush on, roll on, or spray enamel paint for home projects that either require ultra-durability or a glassy, glossy look. Some popular uses for enamel paint include outdoor elements, door trim, and indoor appliances:

Refurbishing a Barbecue Grill

Enamel paint is used as a highly weather-resistant paint for barbecue grills. Thoroughly clean the outer surfaces of your barbecue grill. Remove the grill rack. Coat the barbecue grill twice with heat-resistant enamel paint, using spray paint in a can.

Painting Door Casing

Door casing gets a lot of abuse. So it makes sense to apply a highly durable paint that is also easy to clean. Clean the door casing with trisodium phosphate (TSP). Mask the wall area around the casing by taping sheet plastic with painter’s tape or use self-sticking masking film. Cover the floor with a drop cloth. Apply a minimum of two coats of enamel paint with a high-quality brush to the door casing.

Revitalizing Your Outdoor Furniture

The colors on even hardy resin outdoor furniture can fade after enough time. Colorful enamel paint in a spray can helps to bring that furniture back to life. Use a pressure washer set to low pressure, or use a water hose, soft brush, and mild detergent to clean the furniture. Let the furniture completely dry, then spray it with two coats of enamel paint.

Fixing Kitchen Appliances

Touch up chips and small scratches in refrigerators and stovetops with small bottles of appliance enamel paint. Liquid enamel paint is nearly as hard as the baked-on enamel coating.

Other Uses for Enamel Paint

Doors Window trim Cabinets Crown molding Window sashes Porches Floors Decks Handrails Cabinet fixtures Washers and dryers

Enamel Paint’s Compatible Materials

One of the standout features of enamel paint is that it adheres to a wide range of materials, from slick to porous:

GlassAluminumGalvanized steelStainless steelCaulkingWoodPlasticPorcelainCeramic