First you will need these items to remove it and prep the walls to be painted. A sprayer, DIF (concentrate, sherwin williams or wallmart have it), a putty knife 4-6 inches,a scouring tool, a sturdy cleaning sponge, a bucket, and dawn dishsoap.Scour all the walls. Mix the concentrate with hot water a little stronger than it says to, spray the walls and leave sit for 10-15 minutes. Peel off the paper then spray the walls again to begin removing the glue with the putty knife. after you have removed the glue take the bucket fill it with warm water and a little dawn and wash the walls with the sponge. Let the walls completely dry then primer the walls with latex primer (you can have this tinted to eliminate one of your finish coats). Let the primer dry to see if any glue spots are bleeding through. If you see any you can spray them with a can of oil based primer. This will need 24 hrs to dry completely or you will see it through the finish coat. apply one or two finish coats and youre done. Dont forget to put drop cloths down as this is a very messy job. good luck:)
2007-03-23 19:26:38
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answer #1
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answered by gwen0674 3
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White vinegar. Works great. Use a spray bottle and wet the wall down and leave for approx 30 minutes. The paper will turn loose at the top curling out. Spray more vinegar into the joint between the paper and wall. The vinegar will kill the wheat paste. If patient, you can remove the entire piece in one piece, then clean the extra paste off the wall, let dry, prime and repaint or repaper.
2007-03-23 13:27:17
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answer #2
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answered by hisemiester 3
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The easiest way is to rent a steamer. This handy gadget emits steam to the wallpaper to make peeling it off a breeze. Won't have to do much scrapping with this method. It is small enough to hold in one hand and plugs in. Can use the water, soak method, but takes awhile longer. Most wallpaper is dry stripable. That means that you can pull off the top layer of the paper and then remove the papery back.
2007-03-23 14:05:12
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answer #3
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answered by peach 6
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Mix 25% vinegar and water, soak 2 or 3 sheets at a time
allow 8 to 10 min for soaking the paper
2007-03-23 13:26:33
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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I grew up in a family ,where my parents would rewallpaper the walls once a year and we had to help.We used to just take a bowl of water ,soak a sponge in it and than soak the wall down with it.We than had to scrape it with a sraper.It was a lot of hard work,but it sure was fun to see the results,after we put the new wallpaper up.
2007-03-23 13:37:55
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answer #5
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answered by Heike P 4
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I believe the previous solutions. there's a gadget spoke of as Papertiger which does a powerful interest of perforating the wallpaper for the cloth softener to seep by using. shop on with the training on the hyperlink under. some older wall paper won't come off as definitely. you are going to be able to could hire a steamer from a condo provider. i'm hoping it does not come to that, because of the fact it could get truly warm and messy. stable good fortune.
2016-12-19 12:40:27
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answer #6
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answered by ? 4
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Places that sell wallpaper have steam machines that you can rent. It's the most expensive way, but by experience I know it's the easiest and well worth the cost.
2007-03-23 17:25:12
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answer #7
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answered by Classy Granny 7
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warm water with a sponge, score the paper with a utility knife so that the water can soak through
2007-03-23 18:50:45
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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i got with byron.. only thing i could add is get that lil palm tool that scuffs the paper.8$ and when he says "soak" start at night with a spray bottle.. 1gal and soak it b4 u go to bed. soak it again when u get up.. soak soak soak... let it soak in, dont just let it drip.
2007-03-23 16:39:20
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answer #9
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answered by hometech02 3
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