I need to answer a homeowner's wallpaper question for an article I am writing for the Better Homes and Gardens Magazine's website.
I'm hoping my HomeTalk friends could share their positive or negative experiences with me so that I can write an informed article quoting first hand experiences.
Thanks for your help!
If you are looking for some pattern on the walls, a skilled faux artist can accomplish that for you. If they are good, it will look just like wallpaper. . . maybe even better! ...»
Contractor
WallsTreat Studio/ Kass W... (Alpharetta, GA)
Paint or Wallpaper? Yes, this project is painted!
There are many advantages to utilizing paint instead of wallpaper:
1) You choose the perfect color(s) for your project. There is no need to ... »
BEFORE. . . a bland wall.
Transforming this wall with paint draws attention to the graceful curves of the staircase.
Two brilliant colors of metallics were used to paint the design over the perfect color for this spac
See 1 more photo
My article for Better Homes and Gardens goes out nationally so it is great to get feedback from HomeTalkers across the country.
Keep up the great input.
P.S. I will post the link to the article to this conversation after it is posted on the BH&G website.
And indeed, if it was hung correctly with the primer being applied to the walls BEFORE the ...»
But most of the time, I ended up "scoring" the surface of the paper with a razor knife. LIGHTLY dragging the sharp edge of it diagonally from one side to the other, top to bottom, then repeating the scoring in the other direction diagonally so that once I was finished, there were Xs all up and down the paper. Once that was done, the underside of the paper was accessible to any liquid that was sprayed onto the surface.
That's when the Strip+ came in. I mixed a batch of it with warm water in a spray bottle (a bottle of the Strip+ could cover an entire room if used correctly) then I sprayed the entire wall surface with the mixture. Once I finished all the wall surfaces, I started over in the same place and sprayed them again, concentrating on the seams as well as the top and bottom of each sheet of wallpaper, so that the edges were loosened by the chemical.
Once the entire room had been treated 2 times, I then began at the bottom left corner of the first sheet I scored and wet down and attempted to get the paper backing to come loose from the wall. If the wall behind the paper was primed BEFORE the paper was hung and it was not stuck to naked sheetrock, when originally hung, the peeling process would often be so easy that the entire sheet came off as one piece. If the wall surface had not been treated correctly before the wallpaper was applied, then a flat 6 inch sheetrock knife became my best friend,
But eventually it came off. I don't think I ever had a job that I simply could not get the wallpaper to come off, though I do know that sometimes repeated spray downs were necessary and the scraping could last for days before the walls were ready to prime and re-hang.
I sent my article off to Better Homes and Gardens today. They were very happy with it and encouraged me to continue to send in articles. Thank you, to everyone on HomeTalk and HomeTalk Facebook for your input!
I will post a link to the article when it is published.