Apr 29, 2012

How To Paint a Room


1 Prepare the walls and ceiling (see 'eHow to arrange a space for Painting'). Use a stain-blocking primer to hide any dark mark you cannot take away (stains, knots, ink, dark paint); otherwise, that space can bleed through. Never paint on wallpaper (see 'eHow to get rid of Wallpaper').

2 Make sure there's adequate ventilation within the area.

3 Plan on 3 coats: one coat of primer and 2 coats of end. continually use primer on patched and unpainted surfaces; raw surfaces suck up paint sort of a sponge - or reject it.

4 Paint into all the corners with a 2-inch or 3-inch paintbrush. Use constant brush to stipulate where the ceiling meets the wall (and vice versa), around doors and windows, on top of the baseboard and around the other trim or detailing - and wherever a paint roller will not match.

5 Pour some paint into the roller pan and roll away on the ceiling and then the walls. Pour solely alittle quantity of paint in your roller pan - this can keep the paint from drying out before you'll use it.

6 Try to begin rolling before the brushed-on paint has had time to dry, in order that the rolled-on paint can mix in instead of become a second coat. Rolling out a W, regarding three feet wide, and then filling it in, assures a fair application of paint. Get as shut into the corners as you'll while not creating a messy paint line.

7 Paint from dry areas into wet. this can facilitate scale back any paint ridges. Feather (thin out) all edges as you go, whether or not employing a brush or a roller; this can additionally facilitate scale back ridges.

8 Cover cans or buckets when you are not using them. Keep a rag and brush handy to affect drips, spills and therefore the general messiness of the method. If a drip becomes too dry to detached, let it dry. come later, sand it and paint over it.

Genius Comments Only