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5-in-1 Painter's Tool

I'd seen these scrapers for years and always figured them to be a gimmick, just a glorified putty knife. Then a friend helped me with a roofing project and brought one along. The more I used it, the more I came to see it as the single most handy, versatile and cheapest jobsite tool I've found. The basic functions: scraper, putty knife, chisel, pick, paint roll cleaner (squeegee).

I have probably a dozen of them floating around right now, always one or two on a jobsite. At a buck or so a piece, they are an incredible bargain. The pointy end does a great job of cleaning out crevices, scraping off excess glue or weld slag, prying up staples and getting into tight places. Makes a great little pry bar for wood trim. They can be used as a wedge and make a dandy temporary door stop/door hold open. The point can double as a Phillips screwdriver in a pinch. The flat side does a great job of opening cans. Sharpened up, the large flat blade can be used as a wood scraper or wood chisel. Great for those places where you may hit metal and don't want to trash a good chisel.

You can also customize them for specific tasks easily by filing or grinding them down if, say, you're refinishing and need a specific-sized scraper for the trim or you want to sharpen one side to a near-razor edge. I have seriously beat on these with a hammer and never had one shatter or snap. But they don't bend like a cheap screwdriver when prying with them. The steel is high-quality enough to do the task -- quite stiff and does not bend easily at all -- but still relatively easy to work with, file, etc.

I've had more expensive versions and cheaper ones and there isn't a noticeable amount of difference in the tools. I prefer the Dollar Store ones with the wood handle (great for hammering cans closed, etc.), but the scrapers with the nylon handle (below) are also sufficient.

-- Norman Bolser

5-in-1 Painter's Tool
$2
Available from Amazon

 




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Comments

 
#1 | Mon, 01-05-09 12:33
mightysinetheta

I spent two summers in college painting dorms, and next to a brush and roller, these were our lifeblood. They do everything the poster said and more.

 
#2 | Mon, 01-05-09 12:45
VitaminCM

Love the 5-in-1 tool. It's a painter's best tool.
The best for cleaning rollers.

 
#3 | Mon, 01-05-09 12:54
Chris

Awesome tool. The end all painter tool. Don't even try and paint without one.

 
#4 | Mon, 01-05-09 01:30
TW

I do find that using the tool to clean rollers will rip the nap - to the point of leaving bits of fuzz on your wall the next time you paint

 
#5 | Mon, 01-05-09 03:56
joe

Yeah love mine ... been using it a couple of years now. Worked well for scraping off bits of wallpaper too.

 
#6 | Tue, 01-06-09 09:33
grom

The wooden handled version I favour also has a small teardrop shaped hole in the metal near the pointy end - I use it for pulling nails as I've always assumed that's what it's for but not 100% sure - that makes it a 6 in 1 for me :)

 
#7 | Tue, 01-06-09 11:32
jd

We re-hab'ed a house built in 1917. I think we wore out at least two of these tools. WOW!

 
#8 | Tue, 01-13-09 06:10
matthew king

i learned to put the pointy part into the groove on the top of the paint can and strike it with hammer on the flat side to pierce the groove in several places. this way any paint that ends up in that groove drips back down into the can and does not muck up the seal.

 
#9 | Fri, 01-30-09 10:10
ds

Were I allowed a single tool to take into the afterlife, I would choose this one. If you buy the ubiquitous Hyde brand, spend the extra few dollars for a style where the steel goes all the way through the handle. These will stand up to hammering where the cheaper Hyde's will not.

 

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