I also want to paint the ceiling and have a nice STRAIGHT line of where the
walls meet the ceiling.
Please share your tips of what materials you use etc. etc etc.
Thanks
Mango
"Mango" <Mango_...@puny.com> wrote in message
news:2ukfk3F...@uni-berlin.de...
My best suggestion is this:
If there are two people (like the wife-husband) involved, make sure the
one that is most concerned with the outcome does all the work as they will
be upset until you repaint. Nothing like something you look at every day to
really get to you.
--
Joseph E. Meehan
26 + 6 = 1 It's Irish Math
Let me add my second suggestion, a single word.
Practice.
Lots of it.
Very true. You can help yourself with your ceiling painting by doing
two things:
1) accept that where your walls meet your ceiling is probably not a
perfect 90-degree angle and also is likely not perfectly straight in
and of itself, and
2) try using those wheeled edging paint pad products (I can't find the
brand name on mine, but it's red), and carefully follow the
directions. I use these for ALL edges except horizontal ones, which I
tape with 3M blue tape.
Nice rationalization for lazy folks.
I do a lot of interior painting, and it's a lot about simply slowing down and
taking care. And doing the prep. Like a lot of jobs. Which is why some folks
don't like work. It's this sniggling thing about needing to do things right
that they think is just other people's problem. Or they wish it were...
Banty
Yep. and taking it slow.
Although I do use some masking tape...
Cheers,
Banty
Make that painter's tape not cheap masking tape. :-)
>
> Cheers,
> Banty
We move the furniture, remove switch and outlet plates.
She's GREAT at doiing trim work.
She uses masking tape where needed,
but mainly uses an edging tool for trim and edging.
* ( those little 2 X 3" pads with rollers on the edge )
I follow along with a roller, covering the large expanses of wall.
* Use a 2' extension on the roller, and you can paint
walls and ceiling without pushing around a ladder.
We can do a large room in less than an hour....start to finish
We've found that the cheapest/easiest renovation
is a $20 gallon of paint.
On Sun, 31 Oct 2004 09:45:03 -0600, "Mango" <Mango_...@puny.com>
wrote:
<rj>
:)
The other route is to paint close, and install pre painted/stained
crown molding.
good luck!
--
be safe.
flip
Ich habe keine Ahnung was das bedeutet, oder vielleicht doch?
Remove origin of the word spam from address to reply (leave "+")
If your ceiling is fairly smooth, I've found that Sherline roller pads
work great for the wall to ceiling intersection. You can also do it
by hand with a good brush. Follow up immediately by painting the wall
to maintain a wet edge.
It's always better to bring the white ceiling paint a tad down from
the absolute corner. (approx. 1/16 - 1/8" down) Wall paint that gets
extended past the corner and onto the ceiling usually looks very
noticable.
I rarely use masking tape for interior painting.
Also buy the best quality brushes, rollers, paint.
"Mango" <Mango_...@puny.com> wrote in message news:<2ukfk3F...@uni-berlin.de>...
> I want to do a good job painting the interior of my home. I need some
> tips on painting the baseboards without ruining the carpeting.
Remove the baseboards, sand and paint them, and then re-install. This is a
pain in the tuckus, but it worked faster and better than any attempt of
mine to paint them in place.
> I also want to paint the ceiling and have a nice STRAIGHT line of
> where the walls meet the ceiling.
This is tough if you have popcorn finished ceilings. Paint the wall
without worrying about the edge where it meets the ceiling. Then put up
some masking tape on the wall, and re-paint the ceiling edges where it
meets the wall. I actually bring the ceiling colour down onto the wall by
about 1/8 inch -- it allow me to get a very straight line, even with
popcorn "chunks" right at the edges of the ceiling.
> Please share your tips of what materials you use etc. etc etc.
Buy the best paint brushes that money can buy. For latex paints, look for
brushes that use a blend of Tynex and Orel fibers (tapered fibers
manufactured and trademarked by DuPont).
Thank you. Susan
I used a professional service to do it in my bedroom - they did a good
job. http/www.allwayspaintinginc.com
Mango wrote:
> Thanks
> Mango
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