Not sure what to do now. I painted it, and looked great until I had a fire. Problem is, it's a little too glossy, and it's burning off the top and sides, making it non glossy there so it stands out. It's also stinking, and giving me headaches. I tried it yesterday with the doors open. So, I re painted the parts it's burning off, and did it again tonight. Same result. This paint says it's good up to 1200 degrees. Surely I'm not reaching that hot. I did only let it set for about 6 hours before the first fire though. You'd think it would be dry enough by then. Not sure what else to do, other than sand off this glossy paint, and find a higher temp non glossy alternative. Not sure if paint gets any higher than 1200 degrees protection though.
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			 
	 
	 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 We use cast iron pans/skillets in all of our cooking, and occasionally you have to season them.  I thought the same approach could work here, with a cast iron stove.  I would lightly oil the stove (lard, olive oil, whatever), fire it outside to season it, and then bring it inside to use.  My hope is that a light coat of oil would basically keep the rust at bay, but not soak it so much that it would continue to season/smoke while using it in the house.  Another concern is that if I decided to paint it later -- I've got some oil to remove!
  We use cast iron pans/skillets in all of our cooking, and occasionally you have to season them.  I thought the same approach could work here, with a cast iron stove.  I would lightly oil the stove (lard, olive oil, whatever), fire it outside to season it, and then bring it inside to use.  My hope is that a light coat of oil would basically keep the rust at bay, but not soak it so much that it would continue to season/smoke while using it in the house.  Another concern is that if I decided to paint it later -- I've got some oil to remove!   
 
		 
 
		 . as others have said the constant temps of your woodstove are higher than the smoke/flash point of most oils. I am not sure the 6 hours before baking is anywhere close to what would be needed for the paint to cure. I would spring for a more reputable stove paint and allow several days prior to firing stove to slow bake. krylon may make good paints but my thought is that everything in that big box/DIY home store is spec'd to meet a price point not quality.
. as others have said the constant temps of your woodstove are higher than the smoke/flash point of most oils. I am not sure the 6 hours before baking is anywhere close to what would be needed for the paint to cure. I would spring for a more reputable stove paint and allow several days prior to firing stove to slow bake. krylon may make good paints but my thought is that everything in that big box/DIY home store is spec'd to meet a price point not quality. 
 
		