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Paint is among the cheapest of home renovationsâit freshens things, covers old chips and scratches, and it can make your whole house feel brand new in just a few days. Even if you hire someone to paint a room, the cost isnât entirely prohibitiveâbetween $350 and $850, on average, per room. Thatâs pretty cheap compared to other renovation projects, but itâs still a chunk of change. Since painting is generally within most peopleâs DIY skill set, a lot of folks decide to set aside a weekend, buy some painterâs tape, and tackle the job themselves. If thatâs you, here are some tips to make the job a little easier.
If youâre painting a room with windows or any other glass features, you know the pure tedium of applying traditional painter's tape around the edges of the glass (plus the tedium of having to scrape paint off the glass anyway because you got sloppy). Thatâs where liquid masking tape comes into play: You slather this stuff on your windows (you donât need to worry about getting it on the trim, because it will act as a primer coating on anything thatâs not glass), let it dry, then slather your paint on, let that dry, then just peel the masking tape off like a plastic film. As you can see here, it works like a charm and will save you a lot of time.
Painting a ceiling? Sorry to hear thatâbe prepared to emerge absolutely drenched in paint as it drips down on you, and youâd better have a sturdy drop cloth over everything in the room.
That is, unless you use an inverted umbrella. This might sound silly, but it actually worksâpoke a hole in an umbrella, push your paint roller handle through, seal it up with tape, and proceed to paint the ceiling. The umbrella will catch all the paint drips, and you can safely paint the whole ceiling without worrying about spending the next day scraping tiny drops of paint off of every surface. Pro tip: Buy a cheap clear plastic umbrella so you can actually see what youâre doing. Alternatively, a clear plastic paint tray liner can do the same job with less bulk to maneuver.
You may have been advised at some point to line your paint tray, either with a cheap plastic liner or any plastic bag you have lying around (or even aluminum foil). Yes, that spares you a lot of cleanupâbut the real hack is to just not clean your paint tray at all. Drain excess paint back into the can, then just let your tray dry out. A layer of old paint wonât affect the trayâs usefulness.
Painting floor trim can be a real challenge. You can either spend a lot of time applying painterâs tape all around the edge of the room to protect the floor, or you can try to spread a drop cloth near the trimâbut drop cloths will always get in the way of your brush or roller, and have a tendency to shift away from the wall just when you need it to protect everything.
Instead, use a piece of cardboard (or other thin, impermeable material, like a plastic sheet). Insert the sheet into the gap between the wall or trim and the floor, paint that section with wild abandon, then slide the sheet forward and paint the next section. The sheet protects the floor, you get paint all the way to the edge, and you didnât spend the last hour putting down and endlessly adjusting tape.
When it comes to painting around fixtures and hardware like doorknobs, itâs best to either remove them completely or mask them well with tape. But if you want to avoid that or you have small areas you want to avoid paintingâscrews, for exampleâwhere dabbing a tiny square of painterâs tape is both annoying and ineffective, you have an alternative: Use some petroleum jelly. Dab a bit onto the spot you want to skip painting and any paint that accidentally gets on it will just wipe away when everythingâs dried.
Whether touching up a spot you missed or correcting a mistake, any spot in your room that requires a very fine paint line (like around a wall plate or fixture you canât or simply donât want to remove) can be incredibly challenging for even the smallest brush. Thatâs where a paint pen comes in. These refillable devices make it super easy to get into tight spaces and do quick touch-ups without having to tape the whole area off and try to awkwardly angle a brush. Inspect your work the next day and fill in any thin spots right away, with zero extra prep.
If youâve ever painted stair balusters or furniture legs, you know itâs a pain to get good coverage all around with a brush. So, skip the brush: Put on a nitrite glove, pull an old sock over that, dip into your paint can, and just grab whatever it is youâre trying to paint with your hand. This technique is a lot faster when painting any kind of oddly-shaped element, because your hand is a lot more flexible and dexterous than a paintbrush or roller.
Trying to paint behind something youâd really rather not remove, like a radiator or toilet? You can get in as close as you can and hope the blank spot behind it isnât noticeable, or you could buy a specific tool like a radiator brush or a paint pad that allows you to easily and quickly paint the area behind these fixturesâno removal necessary.
Getting crisp, clean lines with painterâs tape sometimes seems like an impossible task. Thereâs always some element of bleed-through that needs to be cleaned up when the tape is peeled away. But you can avoid this and guarantee sharp lines with something called Back Caulking:
Ta-da! Perfect lines.
Full story here:
Paint is among the cheapest of home renovationsâit freshens things, covers old chips and scratches, and it can make your whole house feel brand new in just a few days. Even if you hire someone to paint a room, the cost isnât entirely prohibitiveâbetween $350 and $850, on average, per room. Thatâs pretty cheap compared to other renovation projects, but itâs still a chunk of change. Since painting is generally within most peopleâs DIY skill set, a lot of folks decide to set aside a weekend, buy some painterâs tape, and tackle the job themselves. If thatâs you, here are some tips to make the job a little easier.
Liquid masking tape
If youâre painting a room with windows or any other glass features, you know the pure tedium of applying traditional painter's tape around the edges of the glass (plus the tedium of having to scrape paint off the glass anyway because you got sloppy). Thatâs where liquid masking tape comes into play: You slather this stuff on your windows (you donât need to worry about getting it on the trim, because it will act as a primer coating on anything thatâs not glass), let it dry, then slather your paint on, let that dry, then just peel the masking tape off like a plastic film. As you can see here, it works like a charm and will save you a lot of time.
Catch drips
Painting a ceiling? Sorry to hear thatâbe prepared to emerge absolutely drenched in paint as it drips down on you, and youâd better have a sturdy drop cloth over everything in the room.
That is, unless you use an inverted umbrella. This might sound silly, but it actually worksâpoke a hole in an umbrella, push your paint roller handle through, seal it up with tape, and proceed to paint the ceiling. The umbrella will catch all the paint drips, and you can safely paint the whole ceiling without worrying about spending the next day scraping tiny drops of paint off of every surface. Pro tip: Buy a cheap clear plastic umbrella so you can actually see what youâre doing. Alternatively, a clear plastic paint tray liner can do the same job with less bulk to maneuver.
A dirty paint tray
You may have been advised at some point to line your paint tray, either with a cheap plastic liner or any plastic bag you have lying around (or even aluminum foil). Yes, that spares you a lot of cleanupâbut the real hack is to just not clean your paint tray at all. Drain excess paint back into the can, then just let your tray dry out. A layer of old paint wonât affect the trayâs usefulness.
The cardboard method
Painting floor trim can be a real challenge. You can either spend a lot of time applying painterâs tape all around the edge of the room to protect the floor, or you can try to spread a drop cloth near the trimâbut drop cloths will always get in the way of your brush or roller, and have a tendency to shift away from the wall just when you need it to protect everything.
Instead, use a piece of cardboard (or other thin, impermeable material, like a plastic sheet). Insert the sheet into the gap between the wall or trim and the floor, paint that section with wild abandon, then slide the sheet forward and paint the next section. The sheet protects the floor, you get paint all the way to the edge, and you didnât spend the last hour putting down and endlessly adjusting tape.
Petroleum jelly
When it comes to painting around fixtures and hardware like doorknobs, itâs best to either remove them completely or mask them well with tape. But if you want to avoid that or you have small areas you want to avoid paintingâscrews, for exampleâwhere dabbing a tiny square of painterâs tape is both annoying and ineffective, you have an alternative: Use some petroleum jelly. Dab a bit onto the spot you want to skip painting and any paint that accidentally gets on it will just wipe away when everythingâs dried.
Paint pens
Whether touching up a spot you missed or correcting a mistake, any spot in your room that requires a very fine paint line (like around a wall plate or fixture you canât or simply donât want to remove) can be incredibly challenging for even the smallest brush. Thatâs where a paint pen comes in. These refillable devices make it super easy to get into tight spaces and do quick touch-ups without having to tape the whole area off and try to awkwardly angle a brush. Inspect your work the next day and fill in any thin spots right away, with zero extra prep.
Gloves and socks
If youâve ever painted stair balusters or furniture legs, you know itâs a pain to get good coverage all around with a brush. So, skip the brush: Put on a nitrite glove, pull an old sock over that, dip into your paint can, and just grab whatever it is youâre trying to paint with your hand. This technique is a lot faster when painting any kind of oddly-shaped element, because your hand is a lot more flexible and dexterous than a paintbrush or roller.
Radiator brushes and paint pads
Trying to paint behind something youâd really rather not remove, like a radiator or toilet? You can get in as close as you can and hope the blank spot behind it isnât noticeable, or you could buy a specific tool like a radiator brush or a paint pad that allows you to easily and quickly paint the area behind these fixturesâno removal necessary.
Caulk
Getting crisp, clean lines with painterâs tape sometimes seems like an impossible task. Thereâs always some element of bleed-through that needs to be cleaned up when the tape is peeled away. But you can avoid this and guarantee sharp lines with something called Back Caulking:
Leave a thin space between the edge of your tape and the wallâabout the thickness of a dime.
Fill that space with a thin bead of caulk.
Smooth the bead with your finger and/or a damp cloth as you would with any caulking job.
Let paint dry, remove painterâs tape.
Ta-da! Perfect lines.
Full story here: