Saturday, September 29, 2012

Noblesville interior rooms

Ryan and I finished up a large interior painting project on Friday.  Our customer is putting her house up for sale so we prepped and painted ceilings and walls in the family room, kitchen, entryway, stairwell, hallways, and master bedroom and bath. We put two coats of Sherwin Williams ProMar 200 in an eg-shell finish. We used "Eminence" ceiling paint. This was a difficult project because of all the stained wood trim that we had to ensure we kept the paint off and also clean up the trim that had paint on it from the previous painter. This slowed us down considerably.  It turned a 4 day project into 5 days.

Steps:

  1.  Sanded all the walls;
  2.  Washed all the walls;
  3. Spackled all the holes and other dings;
  4. Lightly sanded all the areas we spackled with 220 grade sandpaper;
  5. Caulked with quick drying caulk (Bolt) all the cracks between the walls and trim;
  6. Touched up the trim with matching brown paint so the previous paint would not show and also get a better cut-line;
  7. Taped out all the trim in order to keep our paint off the trim;
  8. Painted ceilings;
  9. Applied first coat of paint and let dry for 4 hours;
  10. Applied second coat of paint;
  11. Applied a bead of caulk around the bathroom sinks and also the kitchen sinks. It makes such a difference in appearance plus better in areas where there is a lot of moisture;
  12. Pulled all the tape;
  13. Touched up all trim in order to ensure tight cut-lines; and 
  14. Vacuumed.
Challenges:
  • The brown stained trim made it more difficult for a couple of reasons. It had a lot of paint on it from the previous painter and it had never been caulked in. In order to have straight cut-lines, you need to caulk and touch-up the top lip in order to look professional and clean.  
  • The crown molding had a very small lip that made it difficult to touch up the paint that was on it. We had to apply the brown paint over the stain and not worry about getting some on the wall and then cut-in the wall.  We used brown paint because a matching stain just would not cover very well because of the yellow paint on the stained trim.
Lessons learned:
  • Caulk in trim after you paint the walls because tape does not adhere very well to caulk and it will seep plus pull away;
  • Apply the touch-up paint to the trim before you put the wall paint on in order to get better cut-lines. 
Photos:












 

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Fishers interior rooms

Ryan and I finished a large painting project yesterday. It included two coats of Sherwin Williams ProMar 200 (no VOC) in a flat finish on the walls and Sherwin Williams Eminence ceiling paint on two ceilings. We did the ceilings in the master bedroom and foyer and the walls in the foyer, hallway, stairwell, bedroom, master bedroom and bath. We used 10 gallons of paint.

Steps:

 1 - Sanded all walls with an electrical orbital sander;
 2 - Washed all walls after sanding;
 3 - Spackled all nail holes, nail pops, and other nicks on the walls;
 4 - Lightly sanded all spackled areas;
 5 - Taped all woodwork with green frogtape;
 6 - Painted ceilings;
 7 - Applied 1st coat and waited 4 hours;
 8 - Applied 2nd coat;
 9 - Touched up ceilings, baseboards, and other woodwork; and
10 -Vacuumed.


Challenges:

1 - The stairwell was steep so we had to bring in our levelers in order to reach ceiling;
2 - The walls hadn't been painted or repaired for six years so a lot of prep necessary;
3 - There was a lot of paint on the ceilings from previous painter so had to touch-up; and
4 - The ceilings did not have a very good cut line so taped the ceiling in order to get a straight line.


Photos:

Fishers fence

Ryan and I finished a cedar fence the week of 9/17/12 after we dealt with wet conditions the week before.  We finally got the moisture down below 10% and applied 16 gallons of Sherwin Williams Deckscape waterborne stain.  The color was "Cedar Bark" and the customer was very pleased with it.

Photos: