It depends on how good a job you want to do with the wheels. There are a variety of options - all start with "remove old tyres and tubes.
1. Quick and dirty - wash outside face of wheel with degreaser, give any loose flakes of paint or rust a few swipes with a wire brush, hose down and allow to dry. Spray any desired colour with pressure pack.
2. Decent paint job. Thoroughly clean and degrease all surfaces of the wheel. Wire brush loose paint and rust. Sand smooth overall, with particular attention to the outer face and bead seats, and apply same sequence of paint layers you would do on the bodywork.
3. Good paint job. Same as 2 but use paint stripper to remove all paint first. This should bring the wheels back to original condition.
4. Powder coating. Take to powder coater. Main problem is limited selection of colours, probably none of which are exactly what you want.
5. Best. Dip galvanise. Optionally proceed with 3 or 4.
Costs will vary considerably for outside work (shop around), if you do it yourself (1-2-3) cost will be pretty small, but a significant amount of work except 1.
Sandblasting is only necessary for 4&5 and will be done by the organisation doing the job. I would not sandblast them unless I was either powder coating or galvanising them - or putting it another way, if I went to the trouble and cost of sandblasting, I would either powder coat or galvanise them.
Up to you which you do. Particularly for galvanising, but it applies to all the others as well, be wary of uneven build up on the faces that mate to the drum and bead seats, and excessive build in the stud holes - file, sand or ream as necessary.


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