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Best Eco Paints 2009: No-VOC and Non-Toxic

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It's a very common question here on Re-nest: what's the best non-toxic paint? You want to paint your home, but you don't want the fumes to make you sick or off-gas for years to come. So, readers, we put together this top ten twelve list of what we think are some of the best no-VOC, non-toxic interior house paints...

 
 

According to the EPA, the average home's interior air is three times more polluted than outdoor air, and interior paints are often the prime suspect for the source of this indoor pollution. Volatile organic compounds can slowly off-gas for years after initial application, and thus, you can now purchase "non-toxic" formulas made from natural raw ingredients such as water, milk casein, natural latex, plant oils and resins, plant dyes and essential oils or with formulations containing VOCs in the range of 5 grams/litre or less per can (so technically, these do still contain toxic ingredients; adding a color tint usually brings the VOC level up to 10 grams/liter). Here are 12 interior paints with no or low VOCs and/or natural ingredients.

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[from top left to right]

Benjamin Moore Aura and Natura: The Aura line is low VOC and the Natura line is no-VOC. Practically odorless, 100% acrylic paint and primer. Goes on smoothly, covers well, and and it dries in about an hour.

Bioshield Clay and Casein paints: natural raw ingredient paints; just add water to ready-to-mix powder. Be sure to check out their closeouts section (we like the Mandarin Milk Paint).

Yolo Colorhouse: water-based, Green Seal certified, and zero-VOC paint created by Portland, Oregon-based artists, Janie Young and Virginia Lowe. Available in a palette of 40 hues are specifically designed for interiors and categorized by nature's spectrum of air, grain, leaf, water, stone, clay and the bright hued petal range. And their packaging is really lovely.

Sherwin-Williams Harmony Interior Latex: A Good Housekeeping choice, the Harmony line uses sustainable raw materials, like soy and sunflower oil in their formulation to keep solvent content low and VOCs in the zero-VOC range. Advertised as mildew and bacteria resistant.

Green Planet Paints: Soy-based resins with clay formulations and mineral pigments keep this line of paint as organic as your farmer's market produce. We also like that they disclose all ingredients in their paint formulas right there on the can.

Homestead House Paint Company: a 100% acrylic paint formulated to perform well on top of existing previous applications and has the appearance of milk paint.

Dunn-Edwards EcoShield: an MPI Green Performance Standard rated product, the low odor EcoShield line was created initially for use in schools, hospitals, hotels, homes and other closed-ventilation buildings, and is ethylene glycol free.

Devoe Wonder Pure Interior Latex Odor-Free Paints: available in flat, eggshell and semi-gloss, the Devoe Wonder-Pure line is advertised as odor free and can be applied without sanding.

Olympic Premium: A Green Seal Certification "Class A" paint also awarded the Home Safety Council's Commendation Awards for Product Innovation for Consumer Safety.

Anna Sova Latex Wall Paint: the eco-branded Healthy Wall Finish contains 99% food grade ingredients, making this no-VOC paint a good choice for interior with children and pregnant women.

AFM Safecoat: AFM Safecoat has really great palettes. We also use them for all of our bases and white trim paint. They have a no-VOC line called Ayurveda Essence that has fantastic colors (108 of them!). AFM Safecoat's paints come in flat, eggshell, and semi-gloss.

Mythic Paint: Mythic Paint has a huge amount of colors available, and they're all fantastic. Our editors have used them plenty of times and they're a running favorite. Non-toxic, ultra low odor paint.

Do you have a favorite eco-friendly paint?

Related Links:

How To: Buy the right amount of paint
Good Questions: Low VOC Paint?

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Comments (14)

We are renovating our foreclosed house on a tight budget, and I have used Lowes' Olympic Premium everywhere we have painted. It is a fantastic paint with great coverage and a brilliant range of colours. But the best thing about it is the price tag - around $20 a gallon. I'll stop now as I sound like I work at Lowes!

posted by stellamarbella on July 9th 2009 at 2:55pm
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we just bought a house and are using olympics premium paint as well and i agree its great! i was a little hesitant because i read mixed reviews- and because its lowes lower price paint, but it had a great assortment of colors (much better than home depots lower priced paint- glidden) and has been covering pretty well! dont know if they are still doing it but last week there were printable rebates for olympic paint on your lowes.

one question though- one of the girls at the paint desk was telling another customer that once you add color tint to the olympic paint its no longer low voc- is that true???

posted by erinpearce on July 9th 2009 at 5:19pm
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I used the Lowe's Olympic Premium in two rooms and a third color for trim work. The nearly complete lack of odor was great for painting a bedroom in the winter when windows could only be kept open during the day. But the coverage seemed to vary more by color than it should have- a dark color on a primer coat went on easily and needed only one coat and spot touch ups. A light color over the same light color had poor consistency and less than great coverage. The trim work white was just fine. Overall though, I would use it again.

posted by Faithbck on July 9th 2009 at 5:26pm
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As the list shows, there are quite a few brands that offer low-VOC and no-VOC paint. What about good low-VOC wood stains? I have been greatly disappointed with the ones I've tried, and hope some of you folks might know good options.

posted by jzer7 on July 9th 2009 at 5:49pm
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It is true that the pigments for Olympic are not Low-VOC. If you choose any color other than white or a very light tint the "green-ness" of the paint is compromised. Fresh Aire at Home Depot has no-VOC pigments as does Benjamin Moore, AFM, Mythic, Anna Sova. I'm not sure about Sherwin-Williams. Ask them.

posted by h144 on July 9th 2009 at 8:52pm
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Oh, and I've spoken with Dunn Edwards. Their paints are not really Low-VOC.

posted by h144 on July 9th 2009 at 8:53pm
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We used Mythic in every room in our home and the colors are beautiful. However, it is very expensive and took quite a bit more work than we've ever invested in paint before. My living room alone, with primer, has five coats on it before we achieved full coverage. And even then, the effect is still kind of white-washed. But we were painting over orange (including an orange fireplace) and taking it to a light turquoise...

posted by Loki Parker on July 9th 2009 at 11:19pm
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jzer7 - Vermont Natural Coatings is a low VOC stain and was listed as one of BuildingGreen 2008s top 10 products.
http://www.vermontnaturalcoatings.com/

Also Bona's wood floor products are awesome.
http://store.mybonahome.com/Finish.aspx

posted by Rachelw on July 10th 2009 at 9:05am
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I painted my whole house with Benjamin Moore Natura and it is fantastic. I'd call it no odor, with excellent coverage.

posted by ValHalla on July 10th 2009 at 2:27pm
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I've had good experiences with Benjamin Moore Natura paint: full coverage with 2 coats, huge color selection, no odor. But it's a bit pricey at around $50/gallon.

posted by pling on July 10th 2009 at 5:51pm
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I used Benjamin Moore Aura to repaint 2 bookcases. Both were previously painted black (one with latex and one with spray paint). The guy in the store told me I'd need to prime them first but I'm lazy so I just put my new blue paint on them without a primer. The color is vibrant, I got great coverage, there was no smell and it dried quickly! I'm about to move into a new apartment and I'm definitely going to look at the Benjamin Moore Aura paints for painting the place!

posted by The Green Cat on July 11th 2009 at 9:39am
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We have had really great results and only needed to use one coat with Freshaire paint, which we nabbed from Home Depot. We claimed we wouldn't use it twice if it didn't deliver results... but it looks amazing on our walls.

posted by lisbet on July 11th 2009 at 6:40pm
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This is a great list, put together with the consumer in mind! Well done on accumulating a list worthy of publication in any green home improvement publication!!!

Imago Dei | Murals • Finishes • Art
http://www.imagodei.pro

posted by ImagoDei on July 29th 2009 at 2:26pm
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The pigment does add VOC in most 'low VOC' paints. The darker the colour, the higher the VOC's. But Olympic is still 'low VOC' with colour - it is just not NO VOC like Natura. I believe that even BM Aura pigments have VOCs. I am using a black Olympic paint right now and it has almost no odour, but definitely more than the lighter colours.

posted by stellamarbella on August 4th 2009 at 12:41pm
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