Preparing Your Room For
Painting
While it is certainly not the
most enjoyable part of the
painting process, careful
preparation can make your home
painting project easier and less
stressful. In fact, this is
quite possibly the most
important part of the job.
Improper or incomplete
preparation is a recipe for
disaster. Fail to prepare, and
your project is doomed before it
has even begun.
The steps I’ve listed below are
general, all-purpose prep rules.
They are standard steps for most
jobs. Before and after
preparation, reassess the space
to see if something does not
look fully prepared.
Things You’ll Need:
* Roll of plastic sheeting
* Painter’s Tape
* Primer (Water-based Primer is
usually sufficient)
* Spackling Compound
* Putty Knife
Clear the Room
Clearing the room of all
possible obstacles is the first
step toward a quality paint job.
A cluttered room will increase
the stress, work, and difficulty
of your painting project. Begin
by clearing the walls any
removable pieces. This includes
outlet covers, light switch
covers, curtain rods, pictures,
etc… Label any outlet covers and
light switches with masking tape
so they can find their proper
home again. Keep the mounting
hardware together (a plastic
sandwich bag works great),
labeled, and in a safe place.
Remove everything that’s
possible from the room’s
interior as well. Furniture,
fabrics, home décor. Furniture
that cannot be removed for some
reason should be moved into the
center of the room and covered
with plastic sheeting. You
should not use cloth to cover
the floor or any furniture, as
paint will soak into the fabric
and stain whatever is underneath
Clean the Room
Clean the room thoroughly.
Vacuum carpets. Sweep and mop
floors. Wipe down baseboards and
woodwork with a damp cloth.
Clean those pesky cobwebs from
the corners.
Once this stage of cleanup is
completed, cover the floor
completely with plastic
sheeting. Secure the sheeting to
the edges of the floor or
baseboard with painter’s tape.
Wash the Walls
Walls (even those that look
clean) accumulate dust, oily
buildup, soot (from candles,
cigarettes, etc…). Washing the
walls to be painted is a
critical step in the preparation
process. Paint will not adhere
well to dirty, oily walls.
There are many cleaning products
available on the market for this
type of application, but I’ve
found that plain old dish soap
and warm water works just about
as well as any of them. A
sponge-headed mop is an
excellent tool for actual
cleaning. Its long handle should
allow you to reach 8 or 9 foot
tall walls with relative ease.
Once the walls have gotten a
thorough washing, give them a
final once-over with plain old
water to wash any soapy residue
from the surface.
Patch Holes
A smooth surface is critical to
the finished look of your paint
project. Fill any nail holes,
small dents, and nicks in the
drywall with spackling compound.
Press the spackle firmly into
the hole with a putty knife and
smooth as flat as possible.
Allow several hours to dry (per
spackling manufacturer’s
instructions). Sand the repairs
flush with the wall. Apply a
second coat of spackling if
necessary. Sand flush.
Spackling is meant only for
minor drywall repairs, such as
nail holes, hairline cracks, and
small nicks. I urge you to
contact a professional
contractor/drywaller for any
larger repairs, unless you are
confident in your ability to
handle it yourself. Drywall
finishing is something of an art
form (in my book at least) and I
have encountered far too many
botched do-it-yourself jobs to
prescribe the “fix-it-yourself”
method.
Priming
Once you have patched your
walls, priming is the next step
in preparing them for paint.
Primer bonds to your current
surface and gives you a perfect
base to paint on. Primer may be
unnecessary if you are using
Latex Paint to paint over a
previous low-gloss latex paint.
Even if your surfaces are
already painted with a
low-gloss, latex paint and do
not require priming, you should
apply primer to any areas that
are patched with spackling.
These areas will appear glossy
even after painting if they are
not spot-primed.
Taping
Taping is another necessary evil
of preparing for paint. Taping
off baseboards, woodwork, light
switches, outlets, ceilings,
adjoining walls, etc, is the
best way to protect those
surfaces you do not intend to
paint.
Use only “painter’s tape”. It is
blue and available at nearly any
paint, home improvement, or
hardware store. Any other tape
may damage your surfaces when
you attempt to remove it.
Painter’s Tape is low tack and
can usually be removed without
incident within two weeks of
application.
Taping can be very painstaking
work. Apply it so the edge is
flush against the surface to be
painted, then press down along
that border with a putty knife
to seal the adhesive. This will
help keep paint from seeping
behind your tape.
Once you have finished taping
off all areas, you are ready to
begin painting. Take a deep
breath. The hardest part is
already done.
http://www.how-to-faux-finish.com
- The go-to source for
information on all your home
painting projects.
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Adam_M._Smith
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