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Question on interior painting

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JeffC

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Jan 19, 2003, 12:57:18 PM1/19/03
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I've heard different techniques for cutting in walls and ceilings. What
many recommend is cutting in a little at a time, and then immediately
rolling this, to blend the wet edges. I don't know what kinds of spaces
these people paint, but in my experience this just isn't practical. You
have about a minute of working time with modern, high quality paints. And
in some of the spaces I paint (high ceilings, foyers, stairways), there is
just no way this is going to happen, especially working alone.

There are basically 2 problems here: there can be a visible "edge" or
"ridge" to the paint you cut in. When it dries, the roller coat goes over
and the ridge is still visible. Or, there could be a color problem, where
the cut-in paint right next to the wall is a little lighter than the seam
where the cut-in and roller overlap (2 coats darkening slightly.) This is
not going to be a problem when using 2 coats, but with 1 coat and good
paint, if the cut-in is painted too thin the color might not be right when
they're overlapped.

I usually cut-in all at once, and feather the edge so there's no ridge. The
trick is to keep the cut-in thick enough so that the color matches the
roller paint, but no so thick that I start getting sloppy with the corner
edge. What do others think?


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