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benick[_2_] benick[_2_] is offline
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Default Interior Painting / Drywall Texture Questions

wrote in message
...
On Apr 21, 11:43 am, "benick" wrote:
"CoolWebs" wrote in message

...

My girlfriend and I are considering painting some rooms in my house,
but we want it to look professional. Here are some of the problems we
have:


There are various different textures, repairs, patches in the walls.
In order to get the most consistent look, should I use an orbital
sander on all of the wall area or try to add texture to repaired/
sanded areas to get them to match the surrounding texture? Please give
any and all advice. Thanks.


Go rent a Porter Cable Drywall Power Sander with Porter Cable Tool
Activated
Shop Vac...Any tool rental place will have one pretty cheap..Cover the
floor
where you will be working with plastic or drop cloths...Cover any near by
stuff with plastic..Sand the wall with 100 grit sand paper or screen...It
will get about 90% of the dust..Buy a 5 gallon bucket of USG All Purpose
Joint Compound(Green lid)...Buy a 12" taping knife , 6 inch taping knife ,
and mud pan..Put some compound in the pan and add a LITTLE bit of water(a
couple of tablespoons)..Mix it with you 6 inch knife..Coat the bad spots
or
patches that need extra attention..Repeat if necessary...Sand those areas
with the power sander using 150 grit sandpaper or screen...Now skim coat
the
entire wall with joint compound mixing it like I already
mentioned...Several
LIGHT coats are better than 1 heavy coat...Scrape the wall with your 12"
knife between coats...Sand the wall with the power sander using 150
grit..There is a trick to useing the Power Sander..Start on the slow
setting
till you get the hang of itThere will be a dial near the on/off switch
that
controlls the speed..NEVER stop..Hit the wall moving and remove it from
the
wall moving or you WILL leave a round swirl mark...It's pretty easy to get
the hang of once you try it..Touch up any things you see after
sanding...Sand touch ups with a piece of 150 grit sandpaper...Prime with
drywall primer and apply 2 coats of paint or paint 2 coats with Behr or
Glidden 2 in 1 Primer and paint All In One...This is for smooth walls...If
you want texture than hire a pro...The learning curve is pretty steep to
get
it to look right...Texture is a PITA down the road as you already know as
far as repairing...Good luck...


Id say it also depends on what kind of look you want, how textured the
existing
finishes are, whether they match each other and look consistent, etc.
If
some rooms are just drywall with some patches that were not done right
in a few areas, that can be easily fixed. Assuming they don't stand
up
very high and are sound, you can fix them by just using drywall mud
over
a larger area so that the taper is so slight in becomes unnoticeable.
You
may have to apply a couple coats, the being around the patch area,
extending out maybe 6 inches, then after that dries, another lighter
coat going out further, then sand. That's the basic process.

If you're trying to match existing textured walls that have repairs,
that is
more difficult. Might be better to have a pro do it. If you want to
go from
textured to smooth in a whole room, that's the most difficult. Again
you may be able to skim coat it without sanding, but to skim coat a
wall takes some skill. And the amount of work it will be and how
good it looks depends on the skill. A skilled pro can do it in a
fraction
of the time it would take a first timer.


As with MOST everything a pro can do it in a fraction of the time but when
you have more time than money it's time to learn...LOL..I ALWAYS try to
steer my customers away from texture if possible...Having tried to match
somebody elses work down the road a few years MANY times it's a PITA and
costly for the customer..It NEVER looks quite right especially if the other
walls have been painted a few times over the years...Texture looks good when
first done BUT after filling nail holes and repairing damage and repainting
a few times it looks like **** IMHO...YMMV...