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i want to paint my bedroom walls but over the years there has been 5 layers of paint and 1 layer was a mural so everything is uneven and need ugly, what should i do ?

2006-12-14 11:26:01 · 14 answers · asked by Anonymous in Home & Garden Do It Yourself (DIY)

specifically. step by step. thanks

2006-12-14 11:26:31 · update #1

14 answers

You could strip off the old paint but that could be a big expensive job.I would use a flat finish paint and roll it on with a texture roller.These come in various finishes and patterns.This will hide most of your uneven spots...

2006-12-14 11:34:38 · answer #1 · answered by mr. mr. 3 · 1 1

If there's not too much unevenness you night try sanding the high spots with 100grit sandpaper then use Spackle to fill in any damage you do then use 150 grit to finish sand the Spackle then prime and paint. If the walls are really bad I'd do what's called a skim coat which means spackling over the whole wall, than sanding flat then priming and painting,this is obviously a lot more work but it will solve the problem. There's a third method which involves going over the walls with a paintable wallpaper, this essentially puts an entirely new face on the walls, again this is more work but would make for a really nice job.

2006-12-14 11:42:01 · answer #2 · answered by booboo 7 · 2 0

You could never hand sand that stuff off, and any mechanical method would end up eating into the paper face of your sheetrock, causing a bigger problem.

I use drywall compound (mud) and an 8" - 12" blade to smooth it on. Work small areas at a time. When it's dry, I feel it for hollow places or high spots and add or remove (sand) as necessary.

When I'm happy with it, I give it an all-over light sanding, then prime and paint it.

2006-12-14 15:24:32 · answer #3 · answered by B K 2 · 1 0

with the intention to keep new outdoor paint from doing a similar ingredient you want to scrape and sand off the former paint and certain correct so that you've a very good base for the recent paint to adhere to. Binz makes large primes only make constructive you employ timber paint for timber, concrete paint for concrete and metal paint for metal if no longer you're only going to have a similar concern inspite of in case you do scrape sand and proper!! visit a reliable paint middle or a community hardware/paint keep. typically you'll receive a lot more desirable ideal recommendations then the large orange field shops.

2016-10-18 07:34:06 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Below are the step-by-step directions that you requested. They are for normal walls, which you don't have. You need to follow the section on applying tape compund or spackle more carefully. The only way to deal with the uneveness is to use the compound at a leveler. Use a wide knife so that you can see how even it is coming out. If they have 12 inch knives, that could be helpful.

2006-12-18 04:26:12 · answer #5 · answered by jackbutler5555 5 · 0 0

Lowe's and home depot carry wall texture (comes in a spray can) that will mask the uneven texture that is there now. Once it is dry, then you can paint over it. It looks very nice once it is all done and finished. I dont know how badly uneven your walls are, but this stuff is pretty good for masking stuff like that - its worth looking into anyway.
Hope this helps.

2006-12-14 18:37:48 · answer #6 · answered by shomaliatimalla 3 · 2 0

I would give a light sand on rough spots made only by bad paint application, if you use putty or mud, over a large area, it will never be flat and smooth. So just smooth out any ridges or drips or texturizing previously done to it, apply a coat of primer, then two coats of the desired color in acrylic.

2006-12-15 15:09:28 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

well in order to get rid of the texture left behind from the muraal you'll have to skim coat the wall with joint compound sand and then prime and paint

2006-12-15 02:53:30 · answer #8 · answered by Painters4Less.com 1 · 0 0

Go to your local hardware or paint store and ask for a primer to even everything out (they are usually pretty thick). Then you can paint on top of the primer as normal.

2006-12-14 11:35:25 · answer #9 · answered by caro 1 · 2 0

real simple first you sand the walls so that there are no bludges in the walls. then you prime it so you cover up the horrible lloking stuff and then after the paint dries , you paint however you want.

2006-12-15 06:55:06 · answer #10 · answered by ezekiel's mom 4 · 0 0

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