So I have a bit of question for you guys. I recently purchased this home, and I am looking at repainting the entire house. The problem is, the walls appear to at some point have had some kind of texture. Either that, or the owners did not know about the existence of sand paper.
The house is covered in all sorts of reds, yellows, blues, and even in one room, hot pink. Yes. One entire room is hot pink. So, the entire house is getting painted a nice classy white with white trim, or light grey with white trim undecided on it..
Regardless of the atrocious paint colors, what do you guys think needs done with these walls? The jury seems split as I have a few contractor friends. Some say a good sanding will knock these back down flat and may take a more agressive grit to start. Some are on the side of the entire house needing a skim coat.
I am looking for opinions on people that have dealt with this. What options do I have to make the walls flat again? I have never done a skim coat, but am pretty DIY savy. But, if. I don't need to do it obviously I want to avoid it.. I would really like to get rid of this texture
iconoclasterbate t1_jdrsmv3 wrote
You can do both, probably should.
Knock down any peaks with a wall scraper blade or aggressive sanding, then skim coat till smooth. Sanding is messy, wear a mask, cover and tape places you dont want dust and test paint for lead first.
Your walls seem fairly flat, so you might be able to forgo the sanding and mess it creates. I would just give it a once over if so, just so a thick paint bump doesn't add 3 extra coats to your skim job
Either way step one is a TVP wash, cleans oils off, makes surface more porous and ready to paint/mud
Buy mud, mix till yogurt like, so a little more runny than the premixed comes. Add water slowly, cannot remove water. A mixing paddle and drill and 5 gallon bucket works fine
Thick roller on a pole is dipped in and applied to wall
Smooth with a wide trowel. I like the 24" rubber edged ones
Let dry, scrape peaks off, repeat till wall surface is all mud, sand smooth, primer, paint
check wall by shining a bright light against the surface, looking for imperfections in shadow cast
Its laborious and tedious, but not hard. Easier and cheaper than replacing with drywall, but not faster
You'll be proficient after a google search and you finish your first wall. Good luck!