I took a video while I was texturing the last room in our home. It starts after I have the wall seams mudded and taped and the window area is finished with corner bead.
After that I apply the texture to the walls and around the window. I finish with a short clip of the painted walls.
The walls are primed then painted. As always, I recommend that you buy the best paint possible. Cheap paint takes longer to apply and you use more paint. In the long run, you save money using the best quality paint.
Use a 3/4" nap roller to apply the primer and paint.
The video is available at: http://www.tastyvenison.com/pics/Texture.mp4
It is about 4-5 minutes long and will take a while to load (sorry, I haven't figured out that streaming video concept as of yet). It views best with QuickTime.
Jeff
Textured Walls
Moderators: Greg, Mark, mhrAJ333, JD
The day you stop learning is the day you start dying.
No, we peeled off the vinyl wall surface which created a whole other set of problems.
When the vinyl surface came off, it left behind a surface of wallboard that had a "toilet tissue like" composition. My fear with this surface was that, like the vinyl surface, I would not get good adhesion, so we purchase a gallon of a surface sealer from Lowe's that stuck everything to the wall like glue. It did the job.
We had similar surfaces in other rooms that came off cleanly without this problem. This was the only room where we encountered this particular dilemma.
I guess since it was the last room in the house it was kinda like the last nut on an exhaust manifold that breaks off when you apply torque to it.
When the vinyl surface came off, it left behind a surface of wallboard that had a "toilet tissue like" composition. My fear with this surface was that, like the vinyl surface, I would not get good adhesion, so we purchase a gallon of a surface sealer from Lowe's that stuck everything to the wall like glue. It did the job.
We had similar surfaces in other rooms that came off cleanly without this problem. This was the only room where we encountered this particular dilemma.
I guess since it was the last room in the house it was kinda like the last nut on an exhaust manifold that breaks off when you apply torque to it.
The day you stop learning is the day you start dying.
We ended up doing a similar thing, but with a large paint brush, jabbing it into the drywall compound that we spread on first.
The texturing GRIT you ad to a gallon of paint that we tried first was a Stucco Looking disaster.
The drywall compound thinned down is definitely the way to go for a professional appearance.
The texturing GRIT you ad to a gallon of paint that we tried first was a Stucco Looking disaster.
The drywall compound thinned down is definitely the way to go for a professional appearance.
1987 Craftsman Double Wide 42x28,w/attached 28x12 foot enclosed porch/ re-shingled 2 yrs ago. Original exterior vinyl w/no sheathing.
Thanks,
I've used this technique for ceilings a lot and I mix some white paint into the mud so I don't have to paint the ceiling after I am done. This home is the first time I have done it on a wall, thinning out the mixture.
A friend of mine showed me the technique after I was trying to perform another textured surface on a wall that was much more difficult to apply (that stucco look). This uses much less joint compound, goes on in a fraction of the time and requires virtually no artistic ability. You could solicit your 10 year olds to do it (if you could break them away from the video games).
The only down side that I can see is that if you decide later that you don't want a textured wall, you will need to either re-drywall or panel the walls.
Of course, nothing is permanent. It's just a matter of how much work you want to throw into a project and how desperately you want change.
I've used this technique for ceilings a lot and I mix some white paint into the mud so I don't have to paint the ceiling after I am done. This home is the first time I have done it on a wall, thinning out the mixture.
A friend of mine showed me the technique after I was trying to perform another textured surface on a wall that was much more difficult to apply (that stucco look). This uses much less joint compound, goes on in a fraction of the time and requires virtually no artistic ability. You could solicit your 10 year olds to do it (if you could break them away from the video games).
The only down side that I can see is that if you decide later that you don't want a textured wall, you will need to either re-drywall or panel the walls.
Of course, nothing is permanent. It's just a matter of how much work you want to throw into a project and how desperately you want change.
The day you stop learning is the day you start dying.
The sealer is called Zinser 123 and it comes in Latex and Oil based. We used the latex.
Home Depot has it for $17.97 per gallon.
Home Depot has it for $17.97 per gallon.
The day you stop learning is the day you start dying.
Well,
All I can say is that it works on my computer (but mine has all of those files on it) and it works on my wife's computer (and hers doesn't). It also works with Windows Media Player. It does take a long time to load because it is a large file. It works both with Mozilla and IE.
Try going directly to my web site and clicking the link. You can navigate there by going to www.tastyvenison.com, then choosing the Rancho Pequeno link at the bottom of the page, then choosing the "In Process Picture page 2" link then clicking on the "click here for Texture Video" link.
Maybe that will work.
I emailed Robin the entire video in MP4 format. Try Windows Media Player if QuickTime doesn't work.
Jeff
All I can say is that it works on my computer (but mine has all of those files on it) and it works on my wife's computer (and hers doesn't). It also works with Windows Media Player. It does take a long time to load because it is a large file. It works both with Mozilla and IE.
Try going directly to my web site and clicking the link. You can navigate there by going to www.tastyvenison.com, then choosing the Rancho Pequeno link at the bottom of the page, then choosing the "In Process Picture page 2" link then clicking on the "click here for Texture Video" link.
Maybe that will work.
I emailed Robin the entire video in MP4 format. Try Windows Media Player if QuickTime doesn't work.
Jeff
The day you stop learning is the day you start dying.
Jeff,
This is the error I get when trying to play the file in media player.
Windows Media Player cannot play the file. The Player might not support the file type or might not support the codec that was used to compress the file.
This is what I get in QuickTime:
Error 2048: Couldn't open the file because it is not a file that QuickTime understands.
Aren't computers great?
This is the error I get when trying to play the file in media player.
Windows Media Player cannot play the file. The Player might not support the file type or might not support the codec that was used to compress the file.
This is what I get in QuickTime:
Error 2048: Couldn't open the file because it is not a file that QuickTime understands.
Aren't computers great?
At 24MB the file crashed when I tried to send it to Robin so I had to interrupt the send process.
If anyone is able to go to the web site and successfully view the video, will they please let me know? Send an email to: jeff@tastyvenison.com
Ps: if you are on a dial up connection, don't bother. We're on a satellite connection here and that's slow enough.
If anyone is able to go to the web site and successfully view the video, will they please let me know? Send an email to: jeff@tastyvenison.com
Ps: if you are on a dial up connection, don't bother. We're on a satellite connection here and that's slow enough.
The day you stop learning is the day you start dying.
I just right clicked on the link, and chose "Save target as...". It played great for me. I also have a whole bunch of Codecs installed, so maybe thats why my Windows Media Player plays it.
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