Interior Painting Tips: How to Paint Your Walls Like a Pro
Painting interior walls is the easiest way to freshen up your place. But this project can quickly turn into a nightmare if you're not careful. Follow these six tips the next time you paint and you'll get great-looking walls while keeping your sanity.
1 Interior Painting Tips: How to Paint Your Walls Like a Pro
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Interior painting is by far the most popular do-it-yourself home improvement activity,
and it's easy to see why. There's no better, more affordable way to
freshen up rooms than with a new coat of paint. Plus, painting isn't
terribly difficult and doesn't require specialized training. Any
able-bodied homeowner can paint rooms—all you need is a little patience,
practice, and some helpful advice.
These painting tips can help even novice DIYers achieve professional-quality results. Follow these suggestions and you'll not only paint better, you'll work faster and neater, too.
These painting tips can help even novice DIYers achieve professional-quality results. Follow these suggestions and you'll not only paint better, you'll work faster and neater, too.
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2 Prep the Surface
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A
successful paint job starts with properly preparing the surface you're
going to paint. That means you must scrape, sand, patch, and fill every
hole, crack, dent, and surface imperfection. This isn't the fun part of
painting a room, but it is the most important part. No paint, regardless
of its cost, color, thickness, or manufacturer's claims, will hide a
pockmarked or cracked surface.
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3 Tint the Primer
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Priming
walls and ceilings is mandatory whenever you're painting new drywall or
painting over a dark color. But it's smart to prime any time you paint.
Primer serves three main functions. First, it blocks stains from
bleeding through. Second, it allows one-coat coverage for the paint.
Third, and most important, it improves paint adhesion, which greatly
reduces blisters and peeling.
Professional painters will often tint the primer toward the finished color by mixing a small amount of topcoat paint into the primer. This trick greatly enhances the ability of the topcoat to completely hide the primed surface.
You can now buy paints that contain primers, but nothing covers as well or improves adhesion as much as a dedicated primer.
Professional painters will often tint the primer toward the finished color by mixing a small amount of topcoat paint into the primer. This trick greatly enhances the ability of the topcoat to completely hide the primed surface.
You can now buy paints that contain primers, but nothing covers as well or improves adhesion as much as a dedicated primer.
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4 Go for Canvas Rather Than Plastic
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Plastic
dropcloths provide an inexpensive way to protect floors and furnishings
from paint spatters, but you'd be much better off investing in canvas
ones. Canvas is extremely durable and rip-resistant. It lays flat and
presents much less of a tripping hazard. Canvas absorbs paint drips,
unlike plastic dropcloths, which become slippery when spattered with
paint. Canvas dropcloths can be easily folded around corners and
doorways, something that's impossible to do with plastic sheeting. Plus,
most plastic dropcloths must be tossed out after using. Canvas
dropcloths will last a lifetime.
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5 Reach for an Extension Pole
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Forget
the stepladder and get yourself a telescoping extension pole for your
paint roller. Extension poles come in various lengths, up to 18 feet
long, but one that extends from 18 to 36 inches is good enough to paint
rooms with 8- to 9-foot-tall ceilings. Check that your paint roller's
handle has a threaded hole in the end, then simply twist it onto the
extension pole.
When shopping for extension poles, look for one that has a soft, nonslip grip and a rigid metal core. And be sure the threaded end of the pole is also metal. All-plastic handles are too flexible, which makes them hard to control.
When shopping for extension poles, look for one that has a soft, nonslip grip and a rigid metal core. And be sure the threaded end of the pole is also metal. All-plastic handles are too flexible, which makes them hard to control.
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6 Use a Paint Grid, Not a Tray
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Rolling
paint from a paint tray is a futile, messy proposition. Here's a
faster, neater, better approach: Roll paint directly from a 5-gallon
bucket using a paint grid. A paint grid is simply a rectangular, rigid
metal or plastic screen that hooks onto the rim of the bucket. Fill the
bucket about halfway with paint, then hang the grid inside the bucket.
Dip the roller sleeve into the paint, and roll it against the grid to
remove excess paint. It's that easy. At the end of the day, drop the
grid into the bucket and snap on the lid
Encore Plastics
7 Overnight Storage
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If
you're done painting for the day but still have more to do tomorrow,
you don't have to go through the laborious process of cleaning your
paintbrushes and paint-roller sleeves. Instead, simply brush or roll off
the excess paint, then tightly wrap them in plastic food wrap. If
necessary, double up the plastic to seal out any air, then place the
wrapped brushes and roller sleeves in the refrigerator to keep them
fresh. This might sound crazy, but it works—it'll keep the paint from
drying overnight and rendering your equipment unusable.
The next day, simply remove the gear from cold storage 30 minutes prior to painting, and it'll be supple and ready for use. Properly wrapped paintbrushes and roller sleeves can be stored this manner for several days if you're tackling a really ambitious job.
The next day, simply remove the gear from cold storage 30 minutes prior to painting, and it'll be supple and ready for use. Properly wrapped paintbrushes and roller sleeves can be stored this manner for several days if you're tackling a really ambitious job.
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