Get a small container of spackle at the hardware and fill the hole and then touch up the paint if need be.
2007-12-10 10:30:48
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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for plaster, your OH is actual. do you recognize all people else that would desire to do it for you? you do no longer desire to injury perfect plaster, it is so difficult to discover a plasterer now! yet another thought, reckoning on the burden of the photos, is to get image hangers at a ironmongery keep that are for plaster partitions, no longer drywall. ask the clerk. in case you have actual "image hangers," that are slats of timber that are below your ceiling, yet run around the partitions of the room, what you do if so is stumble on a sturdy, invisible cord. you in basic terms positioned a skinny nail in the plaster, against the wood casement the place you may no longer see it, and use the see-by cord (a sturdy, long length of it), threading it throughout the cord on the back of the image or however the hollow interior the physique, making it into an angled shape, for this reason putting the image on the wall. image hangers on partitions seem some thing like "chair rails" on victorian plaster partitions. they have been positioned there so as that the backs of chairs would not injury the plaster partitions.
2016-12-10 18:54:32
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answer #2
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answered by jandrey 4
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You can buy this stuff called Plaster of Paris at most hardware stores. You mix it up and fill the hole with it. Then sandpaper over the plaster after it has dried until it is as flat as the wall. Plaster of Paris is really inexpensive, too. I think it's under $5.00 for a whole container of the powder that you mix with water.
2007-12-10 10:45:31
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answer #3
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answered by chandiepoo 4
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Dry wall, use spackling paste and a patch (fiberglass if small hole and a piece of dry wall if large).
Plaster, use plaster mix.
with both use a trowel to level, then sand flush and paint to match.
2007-12-10 10:31:56
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answer #4
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answered by unknownsoundman 4
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Go with the toothpaste,Colegate works good cause its white.
I used to live in an apartment, and was on a dart team, and everyone would come over to my place to practice, when we moved, I musta used almost a whole tube. Got my deposit back though.
2007-12-10 21:26:11
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answer #5
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answered by Joe Blough 6
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Spackle and a putty knife will fix you up. Very simple to use and clean up, try and find the old paint to finish like new or get hardware store to match color.
2007-12-10 11:00:09
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answer #6
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answered by lenzix5 4
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For simple nail holes when I didn't have any spakle handy and didn't want to make a special trip to the store for it I have used toothpaste. After it was painted you couldn't tell where I patched.
2007-12-10 11:21:16
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answer #7
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answered by normy in garden city 6
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spackling paste, and it can usually be applied with a scraper.
try not to get to messy. once dry sand then paint
2007-12-10 10:48:50
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answer #8
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answered by adam/penny 7
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A can of spackle, sand, and repaint.
2007-12-10 12:45:12
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answer #9
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answered by dawnb 7
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