Anonymous wrote:I recently tried to paint our living room. It wasn't hard except for the edges - I just couldn't get it to look good enough where the colored wall meets the white ceiling and where the wall meets the white molding. It looks so amateurish. Any tips?
Anonymous wrote:I'm the 3000+ sf house owner also preparing for a whole house paint job, not OP, and the 2 quotes we just got for painting the entire interior, including skim coating several plaster walls and smoothing out 3 ceilings, and painting all the trim, windows, molding, baseboards, etc, were very close to each other right around $15k, give or take $500.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eggshell. We redid our basement and I forgot to mention that's what I wanted to our contractor. He painted it in flat and after a month there were scuffs on the wall. I can magic eraser and spray clean EVERYTHING off of the eggshell walls upstairs, but we're going to have to repaint the stupid basement now.
And I agree with pps who say to do it yourself. DH and his friend did our main floor, and I did my master and laundry rooms myself and they turned out great. If you see any imperfections in your drywall, sand them out, wash your walls, and get a forgiving paint. I know everyone on here loves Aura, but I prefer Behr Ultra. It goes on great and it's really affordable. Duron's higher end stuff is nice too and it's all Sherwin Williams color.
No, no, no. Not Behr.
Quality paint costs $60 a gallon.
the new behr premium self priming is excellent and cheap
Montana wrote:Anonymous wrote:I recently tried to paint our living room. It wasn't hard except for the edges - I just couldn't get it to look good enough where the colored wall meets the white ceiling and where the wall meets the white molding. It looks so amateurish. Any tips?
Buy the green-colored Crocidile tape. It is expensive, about $12 a roll. I painted 3 rooms w different colors, including white ceilings. All the hard work goes in putting the tape down. The painting is easy, and very cool when you remove it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did my entire house on flat because the drywall job wasn;t great (cheap flip job) and eggshell showed the lines and lousy sanding job more clearly because it reflects light better. If not for that, I'd have chosen eggshell.
We are repainting a 3000 SF house now too, OP. I hear you about the sticker shock. And we are doing exterior painting, too. Eep.
While I prefer eggshell aesthetically, we are leaning toward going with flat b/c the walls are plaster and have lots of contour and some mars to them. We've been advised by both painters who've quoted us (like the PP^^) that the eggshell will show the mars much more due to the light reflection. We've also been told that flat is easier to touch up w/ paint, w/o the touch-ups showing. We have a 3 yo and 1 yo who will undoubtedly take a marker to the walls here and there in time, so we figured we'd do touch ups rather than wiping down the walls or using magic eraser, etc. Is that impractical?
9:44, did you have plaster or drywall walls?
Perhaps satin, as an in-between?
I'll be interested to see more responses b/c we are in the same boat as you (except I'm guessing your house doesn't have wavy plaster walls!)...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eggshell. We redid our basement and I forgot to mention that's what I wanted to our contractor. He painted it in flat and after a month there were scuffs on the wall. I can magic eraser and spray clean EVERYTHING off of the eggshell walls upstairs, but we're going to have to repaint the stupid basement now.
And I agree with pps who say to do it yourself. DH and his friend did our main floor, and I did my master and laundry rooms myself and they turned out great. If you see any imperfections in your drywall, sand them out, wash your walls, and get a forgiving paint. I know everyone on here loves Aura, but I prefer Behr Ultra. It goes on great and it's really affordable. Duron's higher end stuff is nice too and it's all Sherwin Williams color.
No, no, no. Not Behr.
Quality paint costs $60 a gallon.
Anonymous wrote:I did my entire house on flat because the drywall job wasn;t great (cheap flip job) and eggshell showed the lines and lousy sanding job more clearly because it reflects light better. If not for that, I'd have chosen eggshell.