How to use shiplap or other material on a 12' x 9' bathroom wall?
My bathroom has sheetrock on 2 walls & vinyl covered paneling on the other 2. One of the vinyl paneled walls is behind the vanity and toilet, and I want to put shiplap on that wall. I can't remove the paneling, as I'm not sure what's behind it. (have a 100 year old house so there could even be wall paper behind the paneling as it was EVERY WHERE upstairs) I would like to ship lap over the paneling, then use primer and then latex paint on the ship lap. I don't have a ventilation system in the bathroom, just heat for the winter, and I use a fan during the summer. Will painting using a primer then latex paint, prevent the ship lap from warping? I need something that is "thin" as there is not much room behind the brand new toilet and the wall, & figured that a thin ship lap would fit.
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Is the paneling behind toilet in bad shape? Just paint that. You really should use oil based paint in a bathroom, especially one without ventilation . If you paint your existing paneling, Use a primer called Sitck It sold at Home Depot (latex), then paint with an oil based finish paint.
Ship lap is at least 1/2". You should only use oil based products on wood. If fearful or warping you can back prime it, then glue and nail on ship lap, prime with oil based primer, sand, then paint with oil based paint, 2 coats .
if you have a 1oo yr old house you might have shiplap underneath the stuff you are looking it. Where is the house? Diff places have diff building codes, rules. If not, you can just float a wall over an existing wall. Lowes and home depot sell light weight " ship lap" wall kits.
Best this is just use tongue and grove pine and paint it white. easy to install and wont break the budget. try tutorial on you tube for diy ship lap using tongue and grove.
We did a faux ship lap using underlayment to give the look of shiplap. It's less heavy and easier to work with.
https://www.cribbsstyle.com/shiplap-wall-made-simple/
If it wasn't 18 degrees outside, I'd be buying a sheet of plywood and cutting it down to ship lap size. I live in Minnesota and I do have a basement where I "used" to cut wood, but the mess of sawdust caused me to stop cutting down there. My dad and I built me a shed with a work bench and electricity running to the shed, so that's where I do my cutting now. (or I use 2 saw horses with a sheet of plywood on top of them as my table and I set them on my sidewalk)... but it's too cold out to cut wood now. I love your ship lap that you cut... very nice! I might look into that Rip-Cut Jig for future projects, it sounds very interesting. They need a smiley face holding a saw LOL
I used shiplap in our bathroom. I caulked every single seam so that water can't get behind the wood. Tongue and groove worked well because it's harder for water to get into it as well.
If you use underlayment, you can have the store cut it into strips so you only have to make short cuts with a miter saw.
Good luck!