Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about coat of primer, then lightweight joint compound to even out the area, then sanding to smooth it out, then prime and paint?
You can do that or use wood filler. The problem is with the sanding. If you can DIY, its far easier to replace and it isn't that dusty to remove. Its a lot of work to repair. I tried repairing (till we realized it was lead) and it still did not look as nice as new.
Anonymous wrote:How about coat of primer, then lightweight joint compound to even out the area, then sanding to smooth it out, then prime and paint?
Anonymous wrote:Those who ripped them out, did you use a GC for the work. Did you use a company certified for lead?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd test for lead. If there isn't any, you could do some scraping / sanding / repainting over 2 weeks and make it look decent.
If there is lead, you don't have enough time (or budget it sounds like) to do a great job.
What if it tests positive (the lowest level)? I would still just paint over it, but not sand, right? I won't be ripping out the trim.
Anonymous wrote:I'd test for lead. If there isn't any, you could do some scraping / sanding / repainting over 2 weeks and make it look decent.
If there is lead, you don't have enough time (or budget it sounds like) to do a great job.