View Single Post
  #13   Report Post  
Marcel
 
Posts: n/a
Default How to get a nice vertical line when painting two walls different colors

I believe he stated the wall is spackled? This would indicate there
walls have been textured. If this is the case tapeing is not an
option.

The two ideas here that would work is the Paintable caulking, I use
Latex Dap. Try to keep the bead thin, never mind taping to get the
dap straight, folks at home depot are working there for a good reason
lol. Then cut in.

The other idea I like it the knife in the corner idea. Though you will
have to follow the corner and perhaps end up looking crooked.

With such a contrast between colors, you don't really want to cut to
the crease of the corner. We usually cut an 1/8 of an inch to either
side, depending of the perspective of the corner from which most
traffic in the room will view it. Even with smooth walls, you rarely
come across a perfect corner. Keeping to one side will allow you to
create the illusion the corner is straighter then it actually is.

Do your red first!

ML Painting


On Sun, 04 Apr 2004 01:28:06 GMT, NorMinn
wrote:



Jeff Ishaq wrote:
Hello,

I'm painting a square room, and one wall is to be red; the other walls
should be white. All the walls are spackled. I am having trouble
getting a perfectly straight vertical line in the very corner of the
room, where the red paint of one wall ends, and the white paint of
another wall begins. The slight protrusion of the spackle makes this
transition look very jagged, as it also causes paint to bleed
underneath the masking tape when I try to mask off a nice line.

Is there a trick to getting a nice straight vertical line that
transitions from one color to the other in this situation? Someone
suggested to me 'gum arabic', but I haven't the slightest idea what it
is, or what I might do with it.

Thanks!
-Jeff


It would be unusual for any corner to be perfectly straight. Paint the
white walls into the corner. Let dry at least two days. Get a plumb
bob and chalk line and snap a straight line at each corner so the the
corners are in the red area. The line should be as close to the corner
as possible. Put down painters tape on the white, paint your red wall
and remove the tape before the paint dries. If you press the tape on
carefully, you should not get any bleeding under the tape edge.