Hi Kent! Recently renovated an old house. We increased the heights of the interior walls and put in a new roof. Now we have the lower part of the wall with one texture and the upper part with another. Our painter painted it and you can definitely still see the difference in texture and it looks ugly! Will your method work for this or do you have other suggestions. THANKS!
Can you tell me exactly what product you used (or recommend) on the walls? We are about to do this in our home and are using your videos as guidance! Thanks!
and mandachic88, the answer is no, unless the customer requests that it be done, or there is some sort of damage e.g. water/mold, ect.ect., then it would not be fair to who is paying the bill, it would be alot more costly,(money and time) to demo and replace the sheetrock, and then because it is smooth wall, the whole wall would need to be skimmed anyway, so in this case it would not be a wise choice imho.
We did another room after this one, thinning out the joint compound to make it easier to work. We also worked the compound off a big board using square hocks, used when doing stucco work. It went a lot faster, especially with 2 guys . Replacing the sheetrock would have been more work for sure.
Hi Kent! Recently renovated an old house. We increased the heights of the
ReplyDeleteinterior walls and put in a new roof. Now we have the lower part of the
wall with one texture and the upper part with another. Our painter painted
it and you can definitely still see the difference in texture and it looks
ugly! Will your method work for this or do you have other suggestions.
THANKS!
looks like lot of work. wonder if it would be easier to just replace the
ReplyDeletesheet rock
Can you tell me exactly what product you used (or recommend) on the walls?
ReplyDeleteWe are about to do this in our home and are using your videos as guidance!
Thanks!
and mandachic88, the answer is no, unless the customer requests that it be
ReplyDeletedone, or there is some sort of damage e.g. water/mold, ect.ect., then it
would not be fair to who is paying the bill, it would be alot more
costly,(money and time) to demo and replace the sheetrock, and then because
it is smooth wall, the whole wall would need to be skimmed anyway, so in
this case it would not be a wise choice imho.
good instruction, horrible video.. radio blasting in the background c'mon
ReplyDeleteman.
We did another room after this one, thinning out the joint compound to make
ReplyDeleteit easier to work. We also worked the compound off a big board using square
hocks, used when doing stucco work. It went a lot faster, especially with 2
guys . Replacing the sheetrock would have been more work for sure.
if i were to name my blades, i would not give them a mans name, i feel a
ReplyDeletelittle funny handling something in my hands named ''big daddy''