Congratulations on buying your new home! Now comes the hard part - fixing it up and redecorating to your liking. You'll want to hire a professional painter if your budget allows, but if you're willing to invest some elbow grease and your weekend to the task, you may be able to save a bundle by painting some of the interior rooms yourself. Here are some DIY painting tips to make sure it comes out looking great!
It’s all in the prep work.
The secret to a great paint job is to invest time in getting
the room prepped properly. That means
scraping and sanding any loose paint, patching nail holes or cracks with
compound, letting it dry and sanding smooth.
If you’re painting over a very glossy existing paint, go over it lightly
with sand paper. Once it’s all ready,
wipe down the walls with a wet rag and you’re ready!
Put the furniture in the middle of the room.
Trust me, you don’t want to try all sorts of gymnastics to
paint around furniture. So move
everything to the center of the room and cover it with a tarp or an old blanket.
Buy a roll or two of thick blue tape and mask off the edges
you don’t want painted. It costs a lot
more than normal masking tape, but that’s no good and will pull once you peel
it off. I prefer the 3 or 3 ½”
rolls. Run this carefully along the lip
of baseboards. Put a baggie and rubber
band around doorknobs and then tape around the outside. If you’re a beginner, you might want to tape
the edge of window and door frames if you don’t plan on painting them – but
keep in mind you’ll still probably have to touch them up because the tape isn’t
perfect.
Buying paint.
I’ve used them all, and I recommend Sherwin Williams or
Benjamin Moore paint. Ask if they have a
contractor series, which is usually less expensive because they skip all the
fancy advertising. If you have to use
Home Depot paint, Behr is probably their best brand. Do not try to skimp a few bucks and buy cheap
paint – the poor quality will show and it will be harder to work with. Stay away from Martha Stewart and Ralph
Lauren paints and such – you’re just paying a premium for the name.
How much will you need?
It’s recommended you buy one gallon for every 400 square
feet. Keep in mind that’s just for one
coat, and it usually makes sense to put two coats on. It’s always better to have too much, not too
little. Mark the lids with a sharpie so
you can store it and use it later for touch ups or to match colors.
Standard ceiling paint and white trim paint is usually
universal throughout the house, so always buy a gallon, not a quart.
The biggest mistake people make is rushing into a color
choice. Remember that colors usually
look much brighter and bolder when on a whole wall, as opposed to a small
swatch in the store. So if you’re
looking at any bold color, I recommend going two shades lighter or more neutral
so it’s not shocking once you paint the whole room! Also, the store usually sells 1 quart sample
sizes of colors, so take a few home and try them out first.
What kind of paint do you want?
You’ll look for an interior latex paint. Latex means it’s water-soluble so you can
clean up with soap and water and it’s not toxic and doesn’t stink up the whole
house like oil-based paints (which aren’t even available in a lot of
states.) Rule of thumb – you can put latex paint over surfaces
previously painted with oil or latex paints, but you can’t paint oil over
latex.
Choosing between flat, eggshell, satin, semi gloss and gloss paints.
The sheen of the paint corresponds to how shiny it is. Gloss and semi-gloss paints have a nice shine to them and also are the most water-resistant. You usually want a semi-gloss paint (gloss probably isn’t recommended) in the kitchens, bathrooms, and laundry rooms. Ceiling paint is standard flat, and believe it or not isn’t just plain white – ceiling pants usually have a tiny bit of blue tint in them. Baseboard and trim is commonly satin or semi-gloss for a little shine. Most living rooms, bedroom, hallways walls, etc. are flat or eggshell.
Box paint.
Shake and stir paint really well before opening (with a can opener, paint opener, or flathead screwdriver.) If you have more than one gallon of the same paint, pour all of them into a big f-gallon bucket. Mix them really well and then pour back into the individual cans when done. Even though the paint store follows computerized color formulas, each can of paint has tiny differences. You don’t want one wall to be slightly off, so mix, or “box” them all up so you know all the paint is uniform.
Again, you don’t want to skimp on brushes. Buy one good wooden-handled brush and take
good care of it. The cheap ones will loose bristles as you paint, making a mess. Watch out because there are brushes for oil based painting and brushes for latex paints, which you'll probably use.
You’ll want an angled brush – probably 2 ½” so you can paint the edges
of the walls and also use it for trim.
Wash it thoroughly and comb out the paint when you’re cleaning, and
never let paint fully dry on there. Make
sure not to push hard or bend the bristles back and you’ll preserve it. Put it back in the case and wrap it with a
rubber band to preserve the shape of the brush.
Remove wall outlets.
Take the time to unscrew all outlet covers and light switch
covers. Tape the screws to the covers so
you won’t lose them and put them all in a central place. Then, cover the switches and sockets with a
piece of tape so they won’t get splattered.
Brown paper or newspaper cabinets, etc.
Cover lights, chandeliers, cabinets, fireplaces, or anything
you don’t want to get painted with newspaper or even better, the rolls of thick
brown paper they sell in the paint department of your hardware store. Tape it down with blue painters tape so it
doesn’t pull when you peel it back.
Also, plastic bags work great.
Cover your shoes.
As you walk in and out, you may step on small paint spray,
drops or spills, which you may unwittingly track on carpets and through the
house. So I use small plastic shopping
bags as shoe covers.
To prime or not to prime?
Many people get hung up on using expensive or specialty
primers before they paint. Unless your
wall is hot red or bright pink or you have new sheetrock, you probably don’t
have to prime. Instead, just put two
coats of paint over the walls. The
primer is usually white, so you’ll probably need two coats AND primer if you go
that route, though you can get your primer tinted.
Tarp it.
You may want to spend money on one thick canvas tarp. You’ll use this to run along the wall you’re
painting. Instead of getting a giant
square tarp, get one that is narrow (4’) but runs long (10’) which is ideal for
painting walls. You can cover furniture
and other things with old bed sheets and blankets and newspaper.
Your #1 goal – don’t make a mess.
Your first and foremost goal when painting is not to
spill. Put paint cans and trays in the
center of the room on a piece of cardboard so you don’t kick them over or step
on them. Don’t over fill your paint cans
or roller trays so it slops around. One
little mishap can cost you a carpet or sofa, so exercise caution.
Use an extension pole.
When rolling the walls, they tend to come out smoother and
more uniform when you attach the roller to an extension pole. But instead of spending money on a fiberglass
telescoping pole, but one of the wooden ones that screw into the roller handle,
or even use a broomstick handle in a pinch. If you're painting the ceiling, you'll definitely want to use an extension pole (and lots of tarps!)
Textured ceilings are a nightmare, especially “popcorn”
ceilings. When you’re painting a flat
wall that butts up against a textured ceiling, it’s impossible to run a
straight even line as you paint, no matter how god you are. So here’s the best trick ever – take a roll
of white, paintable caulk and run it in the corner of the wall and the
ceiling. Run a good bead all the way
down the horizontal wall/ceiling line all the way around the room. Then, smooth it out and wipe away the excess
with a wet rage. When it dries, it will
form the perfect smooth, paintable line to run your wall paint up to the
textured ceiling. By the way, those
roller pads that supposedly help you paint a straight line against the ceiling
are junk – the wheels eventually get wet, which spreads paint everywhere.
Keep you brush and rollers wet.
Don’t let your roller dry out. When you’re using your brush, keep the roller
wet by sitting it in the paint tray. If you have to leave it for a while, roll
it in plastic wrap or the plastic cover it came with – it will keep it from
drying. Keep your brush edge dipped in
paint as well in the tray or a coffee can with a little paint in the bottom, or
wrap it in plastic so it doesn’t dry out.
Cut then roll into the wet edge.
Take on one wall at a time.
Use the brush to “cut” – paint an area about 6 inches wide along the
ceiling, baseboards, trim, etc.
Feather your strokes.
Whenever you’re blending one painted surface into another –
brush strokes into roller strokes and vice versa, feather it out by taking off
the pressure, painting increasingly lightly so it all blends in.
Don’t push hard.
When you use the roller, don’t push hard or it will create
lines and uneven surfaces. Make sure the
roller is really wet but not dripping and dip frequently. Don’t push on a brush or it will spread out
and ruin the bristles.
Trim, roll, trim (then reverse.)
I usually trim along the ceiling, baseboards, etc. and then
roll in, making sure to feather my roller strokes to blend it in. Then, I move to the next wall, always
leaving a wet edge. Once I go around the
room and come back, I’ll roll it and then trim again if it needs a second
coat.
If you’re painting the trim, too, remove all the tape the
next day. Run a new line of tape along
the floor and also against the now-dry wall.
Use the brush to carefully paint with horizontal strokes, feathering in
to each wet edge. Don’t leave too much
excess or it will drip. Paint over any wall paint that happened to splatter or
drip on the trim.
Let it dry.
Don’t be impatient and start pulling up tape and messing
with the walls and ruin your work. Leave
it over night to give it ample time to dry.
In the morning, you can pull up the blue tape (which won’t pull paint
off the walls,) put outlet covers back on, and put the furniture back in
place.
Clean up.
Once you are done, take all wet brushes, rollers, pans, and
paint cans out to the front lawn or the garage on newspaper. Pour all the excess in the can, seal it
tightly with a hammer, and label it.
Wash the brushes thoroughly in warm soapy water and spin them out by the
handle to dry, then put them in their cases again. Hang brushes upside down so the bristles stay
in form. Roller pads are usually cheap enough
to just put in a plastic bag and throw out.
Let any container dry in the sun before you put it away or throw it out. Never dispose of oil based paints or paint thinners in the drain, on your lawn, or in the sewer.
Anthony, I agree, more time prepping will usually end up with a better interior paint job. My wife and I would love to repaint our house, but our 3 year old still loves to draw on the walls. We're hoping the time outs work & that she learns to love painting on paper. I've heard that some higher quality paints make it easier to wipe off things like crayon and pencil.
ReplyDeleteGreat tips the brush you choose and prep work is most important..
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Hey, thanks for giving me an idea. This is very helpful for me. I'll try this on my Condo in Cubao. Thank you very much for sharing!
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