This video shows how to keep those touch ups small and not have to paint the whole wall! Patreon: www.patreon.com/user?u=109961...
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@ced2k Жыл бұрын
For small paint touch-ups like that, one method that worked well for me is to apply the paint with a brush, then roll a DRY roller over it. It will pick up the excess paint (if any) and imprint the roller texture in the paint 🙂
@steve32221
Жыл бұрын
Exactly. Works great at removing any edges.
@lwilton
Жыл бұрын
What he was doing is called "stippling". You can do this with a paint brush. You only get the front 1/4" or so if the bristles wet, and then you use the point of the brush, pushing it repeatedly against the wall as he was doing the roller end. For something this small it would be best to use a 1/2" fairly stiff bristle brush, or alternately just one end of a 4" brush. Dry rolling, as you discovered, is a really good way to help clean the end result up.
@gregh988
Жыл бұрын
Yes! This is my go to technique
@gregh988
Жыл бұрын
Yes! This is my go to technique
@gregh988
Жыл бұрын
Yes! This is my go to technique
@jeffthewhiff Жыл бұрын
Ben, I like that you decided to try using a "mini" roller to touch-up a few areas on your wall in this video. I recently used a sponge dipped in a litttle paint and it did a good job of restoring the "stipple" texture of the wall too!
@Beany8710 ай бұрын
I was going to attempt a small repair behind a door with a paint brush but I will definitely be using a roller now instead, there was another more visible dent that I was going to leave but I will see how well I can fill the first hole. Thank you for the great informative vid!
@HotspotsSoutheast Жыл бұрын
The pink stuff is great for fixing dents. I use those cheap disposable foam brushes for dabbing paint on patches. It leaves a good texture. If the patch is a large one and the texture does not match the original wall I wait for the paint to be nearly dry then I deliberately dab on it with the foam brush or a regular brush to mess up the smoothness of the fresh paint. If it still looks too smooth after I put more paint and deliberately mess it up too until I’m happy with the texture. Doesn’t always work but it’s usually less noticeable.
@danham3344 Жыл бұрын
“Paint Conspiracy”😮. 🤣😂 I love how relaxed and light hearted all your videos are. This was a great one as I’m sure everyone has touch ups from time to time. Thanks for a great channel with great content. Very appreciated.
@davenelson8187 Жыл бұрын
A trick I’ve used with success after repairing and sanding filled spots smooth is to stipple the smooth surface with either primer or the color coat using just the end of the brush bristles to avoid the spot from looking too smooth. This also helps before rolling the wall with all new paint. I also use a perpendicular scraper to catch and remove any and all raised bits from the previous painting before applying the new coat.
@noshortselectric5208 Жыл бұрын
Ben you're a master at this kind of work and even better at making these tutorials. Top quality content on the subject
@shaundomingue6509 Жыл бұрын
You are Awesome! I learn so much from your channel. I take what I learn from you and use it on the job. My best to you.
@andym1134 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. I was always under the assumption you would have to sand the surrounding paint as well before repainting over but by the look of it the paint will stick to the prior coat anyway.
@billdozer3674 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Ben that video was a hoot!!! You have helped me tremendously with my projects and I just wanted to say thanks 👍👍
@joeb7508 Жыл бұрын
What you have done with the paint is called stippling. Can be done with either a brush or roller. Also paints with sheen will flatten over time. Thinning the touch up paint substantially with water can help match the sheen
@jayzee2390
Жыл бұрын
Joe B, are you a painter?
@dirkdiggler9379
Жыл бұрын
To match the old wall stipple I add some powder bag mud to my first coat of primer to thicken The more stipple you need the more bag mud you add. Works like a charm. I’ve been repairing wet plaster walls in historic homes using this technique for 25 years
@simons5160 Жыл бұрын
Thanks bro, I've been getting tips from you for about 2 years now. I've started my own Plastering business in New Zealand since then and we're growing fast. I wish i could return the favor by donating through your live streams etc. All in all, kinda just wanted to thank you my guy, you're the man.
@ronnymcdonald2543
Жыл бұрын
Bro if yr in business in NZ yr here to make $$$ and time is $$$ - Im a builder and when do touch ups like this I putty / filler, overfill and whack an electric sander on it then quick roll with a matched paint - Result excellent. That's way too much work for such a simple quick fix.
@Longtack55
Ай бұрын
Where are you mate?
@stronghumantraining Жыл бұрын
Your attention to detail is awesome 👏🏽. Even the seemingly simple jobs can be done better! Thanks man!
@joshlofberg1861Ай бұрын
I'm a big fan of your skating channel and was looking to fix up my house a bit before selling. Thanks for the video legend!
@chrisastacio8846 Жыл бұрын
So this may sound odd but I have fluffed up and used a Q Tip in the past. I roll the paint on with it and have been happy with results! Obviously this works on small spots. Also for sanding, I've just used a paper towel or even fingers in the past. Just my input:)
@gonnfishy2987
7 ай бұрын
Neat advice, it has helped me!
@eastinhunter4962 Жыл бұрын
Heck yeah Ben, I’m on break at a side job rn rippin dabs and skimming walls. Keep up the great work. Always Super helpful and entertaining.
@youssefhamidi8152 Жыл бұрын
Hi. A painter suggest a tip for me when filling in holes. He said instead of sanding it to use a small damp cloth and wipe over it. Doing so wipes all the extra filler off the sides and leaves the holes filled in perfectly. No sanding required.
@Bapuji42
7 ай бұрын
That's exactly what I do, especially if there's texture. Sometimes I just use my thumb.
@joshyaash
6 ай бұрын
@@Bapuji42 Definitely sanded some patches like this with my thumb haha. Works just fine if I'm just getting the walls ready for the paint crew
@Bapuji42
6 ай бұрын
@@joshyaash For real, you don't want to get too formal about spackle.
@TheSpecKK
5 ай бұрын
Last pink stuff I applied says it’s silica. Not good for your skin, even worse for your lungs, so wet cloth finish is faster and safer.
@RP-pc6ji Жыл бұрын
For the paint I sometimes use a super soft ladies large makeup brush with just the very tips of the fine bristles dabbed with the original paint (original mix if possible!). I gently dab this on the wall (never brushing!) and touching the wall very delicately. Do this multiple times but work away from the repaired spot to fan out using less dabs and paint as you move away from the repair. If the original paint on the wall is not too old this is generally quite effective. If the spot in question is not in the normal line of sight and not subject to bright light flooding it, the result should please the homeowner and avoid you/them having to paint the whole wall.
@AH88019 ай бұрын
Good tips! Another good tip I've picked up is simply to use masking tape around the area prior to starting
@christopherpryse71177 ай бұрын
Brilliant tips I’m stealing the roller dabbing technique! Love your attention to detail Also loving lots of the comments with more great tips thanks everyone 👍
@KevinsDisobedience Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately with the right (or wrong) angle and natural light almost any touch up is noticeable no matter what you do if the sheen is Satin or Semi. With eggshell or flat paint you have a decent chance in the right light. People are so picky these days we usually just reroll the wall (or try to feather and hide the edge above a window or door). The other thing I’ve noticed over the years is that the more uniform the patch the easier it is to spot; whereas, non-uniform patches tend not to catch the eye. Basically people just need to fill up the room with furniture and pictures and quit focusing on tiny imperfections. Drives us nuts!
@vancouvercarpenter
Жыл бұрын
100%
@Beany87
10 ай бұрын
Not sure minimalists will agree but as a hoarder I concur! 🤣😂
@MrJwyne
8 ай бұрын
Seriously, some customers want a flawless unnoticeable patch. It does drive us nuts.
@edover50 Жыл бұрын
Great video as always Ben. My technique is a little different. I fill and use a damp sponge to remove the dry leftover mud adjacent to the hole. I then dab the paint and use the same damp sponge to “feather” the paint around the edges. It’s 90%+ perfection and never end to paint the whole wall.
@vancouvercarpenter
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing!
@EricLS
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, on a textured wall, the wet sponge will make it literally impossible to find the hole. I left my last rental before I bought my place, and the landlord was floored how perfect we left the place
@joe800096
Жыл бұрын
Ed; I ve done this as well the sponge works really well for small blend in areas.
@gflopez1127
5 ай бұрын
thats what I do and it works great!!
@saddestchord7622
3 ай бұрын
I've used artist's brushes and sponges. I like sponges more.
@scottcnx Жыл бұрын
Love the painting videos! Hope you make more 👍
@claudiamiller7730 Жыл бұрын
Very nice vid…very helpful! I’ve got a trouble spot on my ceiling that needs some attention…but it just might be easier to move…LOL! Thanks for the info!
@charliep5139 Жыл бұрын
Awesome tips! I've had good success with those little foam brushes and just dab with it. I'll mix my paint really well and then use the foam brush to push the excess paint on my mixing spatula back into the can and whatever is left on the foam brush i take even more off and then just dab the touch up area. I barely use any paint and it has come out great every time! those brushes are super cheap but I'm even cheaper and I just wash the brush with just warm water and let it dry and put it in a ziplock and reuse the same one.
@argentotenebre
Жыл бұрын
Me too bro, buy them in bulk and they’re like 20-30 cents each
@scottblair3719 Жыл бұрын
I use the same dabbing method, but with one of those little sausage foam rollers that have a rounded end. You can easily control the surface area covered.
@bobwhite27 ай бұрын
Excellent demonstration and advice👍
@johnc1280 Жыл бұрын
earned the hard way. I painted my kitchen last winter. Touched up a few spots after removing an outlet cover (which tore up the first applied paint in the winter) and the new touchup paint went on differently. Shadowy. Just realized painting in different temperatures will yield different results
@rolando385314 күн бұрын
Thanks for the tips now hopefully this works so i dont have to paint whole wall.Bought house and people had frames and curtains everywhere.When they moved out they left holes everywhere but paint was still good condition other than holes.Thanks saved me money and time
@BlossomPainting Жыл бұрын
We record all paint type& colour codes / application methods (spray/brush&roll nap) on record. This is part of our service and lowers our cost on future calls from client. Thanks for your great video tutorials.
@ghandimauler9 ай бұрын
Glad he called out the fact you can't get 100% unless you do the full routine. That is true particularly if a) the paint has been around a while (and oxidized, changing the colour over time) and/or the wall is exposed to sun much of the time (which fades colours). Depends on your need to match....
@Cricketchirps39 Жыл бұрын
Great job! It blends very well and it is hard to find where the patch is!
@BoomKing69 Жыл бұрын
You really are the drywalliest carpenter. Lol. But I learned a lot from this one! And even got some further great tips from the other comments. :)
@srharris88 Жыл бұрын
As a painting contractor i do touchups quite often. The hardest part is getting a really good match, it needs to be the exact color AND sheen. I have a tinting kit that I carry in my van, and if its a tough sheeen Ill buy two paints, one too shiny and and another too flat and mix until i get it just right. Once you get the paint PERFECT you can touch it up however you want, although spraying works really well to fan out the hard edges. Dry rolling can work as well.
@Smuddpie
Жыл бұрын
That's skill. Hats off to you!
@dirkdiggler9379
Жыл бұрын
@@readhistory2023 did you even read his comment ?
@justice4g
Жыл бұрын
when I had too much sheen on some touch ups I found a light sand after painting would bring it back to match the original
@kenf9089 Жыл бұрын
Talk about old-school. I'm the guy that planted the old-growth. I enjoy your videos. Keep up the good work.
@whiteface5055 Жыл бұрын
I like to use masking tape to go around the small damage. It allows me to apply the mud without touching the wall with the small trowel. Then remove the tape and add more to do the sanding. I use a hobbie brush to do the prime and paint.
@cjimcook9 ай бұрын
Some (big box?) hardware stores sell single-use spray cans. That is, it is a jar with an attached aerosol sprayer. Pour your paint in the jar, then spray. If paint tint matching is a challenge, spraying with your "close match" new paint but feathering it out via spraying may be an option.
@debandmike3380 Жыл бұрын
For filling tiny holes I do the surgical approach, I will put blue tape across the hole, Cut out the exact shape of the hole (cut the hole first to make it easier), Press mud into the hole and use the knife to pull across the tape. Then remove the tape and you are left with a perfect slightly proud fill, without any buildup, And the knife never touches the wall. When the mud dries and shrinks just a hair gently scrape with a razor blade to get it down to level, As for painting I usually gently dab it with a Q-tip evenly distributing across and slightly over the repair
@DrDRE4391
5 ай бұрын
I use the same method, but I sand with the blue tape intact. Once you sand to see see some sanding of the blue tape, clean and paint.
@samsam202111 ай бұрын
Actually a good video for tiny patches. One thing to mention (I skipped through so not sure if this was mentioned) this will really only work if you use the EXACT same paint left over from actually painting the wall in the first place. If you have to get a new tub of paint, even if it’s the same brand and colour if it’s a different tub of paint it will always be a slightly different shade. Actually as I’m typing this … he mentioned this exact point … side note when he says ‘flashing’ or ‘flash’ that’s a decorators term for the Sheen difference that you will get on a big patch job. Also if you are patching over fresh filler it’s best to double coat it so the filler doesn’t flash. Really good video 🤘🏼🙋🏻♂️
@diogognc7 ай бұрын
I use a washing dishes sponge and works very well as well... thank you for the tips
@chiebert290 Жыл бұрын
6:43 I love the mini brush but it's so important to mix your paint really well. Even for spot repairs so that hopefully the sheen is a bit closer. The dulling agent usually settles to the bottom. Stir it baby!
@dirkdiggler9379
Жыл бұрын
The dulling agent ? Flat paint has more sand and less acrylic
@sarahpegler7876 Жыл бұрын
8:39 Ben, these videos are so well done, thank you. Just trying to find one of your videos that will demonstrate how to fix a “big dent” - the wall has a large indent /cracked from a person falling against it as they fell down the steps!
@gme10955 Жыл бұрын
Quick set DAP putty is really good for small drywall repairs and filling nail holes on trim.
@franciscocruzjr5721 Жыл бұрын
This works for me. I use an old plastic credit card as a putty (lightweight spackle) knife and a small piece of sponge to apply the paint.
@cagedtigersteve Жыл бұрын
2 hours after fixing these little dents the kids made a bigger hole in the wall. You can never fix all of these little imperfections in life so don't worry about it.
@heckingbamboozled8097
29 күн бұрын
If you're in an apartment with a deposit, it's very relevant.
@OilBaron100 Жыл бұрын
That was pretty helpful. I’ll follow your tips. Cheers.
@Hotsauce-cj7kj Жыл бұрын
You just HAD to feather that paint edge didn’t you!….drywall addict! Lol Thanks for all your incredibly descriptive tips bro. You definitely help me.
@isitoppositeday69448 ай бұрын
There is a few products that will touch up as you'd hope but it also depends on the colour and sheen. It's worth a shot to see if it passes. Have had good luck on walls with Super 2 low sheen egg from Cloverdale myself, also the Behr paints I think.
@creekfreakjr Жыл бұрын
I generally take my sand paper and run across the concrete to dull the paper. It really helps with scratches.
@bill360
Жыл бұрын
Good tip
@dmitryche1630 Жыл бұрын
Love your videos, you’re awesome
@themekfrommars Жыл бұрын
Nice tip, thanks! Any thoughts on the problem we face in Switzerland which is never ever ever ever being able to match the same shade of white?
@-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.- Жыл бұрын
You're an artist!
@mrcoollu9662 Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for explaining and showing this was helpful
@foamer443 Жыл бұрын
I have had reason to do a reasonable amount of this sort of patch and paint over the last two years or so. My method patch and sand with 220 grit, but take the sanded area beyond the patch. I think, at least to some degree, the material used can make a difference. In my case I'm using Benjamin Moore paint and for painting I use a foam brush just to get the paint onto the wall. When I started this process I used the standard mini foam roller, but I found was the texture was not the same as a regular standard wall roller. Makes sense right!? What I bought (HD) and left on my bench for quite some time is a 3" fibre roller kit from an outfit called Pintar, the model?, but called "Quick fix & small area kit." I tend to roll out the paint 3-4" in roughly a circle. I have found once I have done this, thou sometimes two coats, I literally can not see the patch. The texture is near identical to original. The one draw back to this little roller is, the handle and axle is plastic. To release the end hub one has to pinch the end of the axle slightly. With paint on the roller and very tight space it can be done, but it can be awfully annoying at times. On the packaging it also mentions good for trim work, which is actually why I purchased it in the first place, and it is. Far superior, and quicker, finish especially for those larger flat sections than any brush. This roller does a good job conforming to some of the not so deep moulded areas. Am I cheerleading this product, yes. I am not associated with the company in any way. This, in my opinion at least, is a product that does a really good job, thou of course it will depend on the skill of the user too.
@fredWaxBeans11111 Жыл бұрын
I find using a foam brush to be good in a situation like this. Foam brushes have a point at the end, so you can control the paint to very small tight areas, but it also gives a finish similar to a roller.
@MrPeach1 Жыл бұрын
I got Lowes to color match my paint. It was slightly darker. I ended up repainting the whole wall. It is 100 percent. The color was close enough to be only needed on the one wall.
@donaldsincennes9673 Жыл бұрын
Friendly Tip! I would have used a plastic yellow putty knife. Water down putty. Avoid sanding. Use an artist brush or a small foam pad. The Gooseneck Guy! Inventor of the Gooseneck paint brush. Cheers!
@homer009x Жыл бұрын
Throw away 1” foam brushes are the best for this technique. I’m just a DIY guy, but I came up with exactly the same method on my own, including the curled sand paper and the dabbing.
@mr.c3928 Жыл бұрын
Good tip VC. Thanks!
@ccaatthheerriinnee Жыл бұрын
Can you do a video on how to find a good contractor, where to look, what to ask, what research should be done (like price research)? I’d say finding a good company to do the work is the biggest challenge as a new homeowner
@dooshnukem32
Жыл бұрын
Check out a channel called The Honest Carpenter - another contractor turned DIY guru. He put out a great video a few months back about this very topic. I'd still enjoy Ben's take on it tho 🙂
@YouTubehndl Жыл бұрын
If you use a razor blade for small homes it puts the Drydex in perfectly on smooth wall and because you have so little leverage on the tiny blade you don’t smoosh and change the paint texture around it
@katejay97868 ай бұрын
I used a paint formulated with nanobots which detects inconsistencies and reconstitutes itself whenever I ding the walls, which is constantly. The only problem is that my house is now self aware and is evicting me because I'm so clumsy. I managed to delay it by threatening a DIY move out but it's only a matter of time at this point
@talitherose
3 ай бұрын
🤣
@rlyman1113 ай бұрын
Still learning at 82! Thanks for letting me know that it will not be perfect on mu first job/try.
@coina-dig-tion6322 Жыл бұрын
I just spent weeks mudding a ceiling. did the prep work filling the joints. applied tape. mudded and feathered. sanded. where there were gaps to either side of the tape I'd fill with mud, sand, repeat. Must have done that 8 or 9 times (yeah, I'm not good at this but had great success with one joint in a bathroom so wife said I was going to do the whole bedroom ceiling). Anyway, now I've painted the ceiling and can clearly see all joints. no definite mud edges but the bump creates a shadow. 2 questions. Will enough paint along the tape on either side fix this or do I have to rough up paint and add more mud?
@johnd5643 Жыл бұрын
Any reason you wouldn’t surround the ding with painters tape to protect the wall while you sand?
@justice4g Жыл бұрын
sometimes I just finger paint to avoid brush marks, also when I have a higher sheen on touch ups a light sand can bring it back to match
@johnbarnett2804 Жыл бұрын
I feel like I'm watching Bob Ross. Very mellow video. Great tips.
@robvolsky33388 ай бұрын
Just thinking outside of the box, a dappled faux finish on a new wall means you’ll never see minute differences on a solid one- color wall. Of course, most people want to live inside of the box.
@warrenmansfield97938 ай бұрын
I realized right when you showed how it turned out. That the reason people in general do so many videos. Is because they like to hear there own voice.
@yungmessenger2975 Жыл бұрын
I was taught to use caulking and spread it with a 5 in 1 for little dings that small. It’s quick and it’s unnoticeable once painted. The caulking sinks in so you don’t even have to sand down anything.
@marcl2213 Жыл бұрын
The pink stuff is not suposed to «flash» (show were you did patch) but sometimes it will. I don’t take a chance and I always cover with a primer/sealer before paint. Your idea of using the point of the small roller is good, at least it gives a texture to the paint that will match the one already there. Doing those touch ups are tricky, you have to do them with the same paint you applied the first time. If it’s in a house overtime you will get a thin coat of grease on walls so as soon as you do a repair and paint, it will show. White walls are the easiest, coloured walls the most complicated to «spot paint». Cheers!
@arlcrane Жыл бұрын
Roller did a nice job. I would also think Q-tip, or dabbing with a cloth would do better thana brush. Thanks!
@brianmorris7498 Жыл бұрын
Nice work !
@grimreefer213 Жыл бұрын
Even if your paint blends in perfectly you have to consider the condition of the wall. If you put a patch on it then the texture will show differently, the patch will be flat but the wall may be textured. Also if the walls are dirty then that messes up your touch up, so at this job i’m at now i’m doing the punch list and I have to get in like 10 different paints and “touch up” many different areas. I’m on a deadline so I have to try to blend it but i’m gonna end up having to paint entire walls which is a pain in the ass. These walls were painted like a month ago but they’re already dirty and discolored because of other trades working there
@MrMhowden2 ай бұрын
@VancoverCarpenter thanks this video. What if you use a paper towel or rag to dab the wall?
@traces280729 күн бұрын
Just found you! Do you have tips for repairing wall corners? As in small chunks taken out from moving furniture etc? I find corners challenging! Thanks 😊
@jaredscott2617 Жыл бұрын
It might be good to say that it very much depends on the product that you used on the wall. There are paints that you can touch up with that get zero flashing almost no matter how you do it. Also once you get into eggshell, satin, or semi even the small patches that you did would show very easily with the higher sheens. The newer versions of the computer matching machines are doing better, but most stores don't have them. They can get 98%. So depending on which pigments go into your paint and how much pigment is used you can color match and touch up with it.
@BlossomPainting
Жыл бұрын
I record all paint codes/application method (nap/brush/spray) on internal records. Part of lowering costs if ever called upon.
@jaredscott2617
Жыл бұрын
@@BlossomPainting first off I love how your name is painting. Second im not sure how that information is relevent for touch up. Its very obvious which method was used when you are touching up. Thirdly you should always give the client a record of paint color and product. Lastly are you a bot?
@BlossomPainting
Жыл бұрын
@@jaredscott2617 1st, thanks. 2nd, it’s not always obvious to the next guy (less room for error WHEN touching up). 3rd, Internal records also show up on clients invoice. And NO , we are not a bot.
@jaredscott2617
Жыл бұрын
@@BlossomPainting "we are not a bot" sounds sus to me. How many base belong to you? All? You need to train the next guy better if he cant tell between brush, roll, or spray.
@BlossomPainting
Жыл бұрын
@@jaredscott2617 the next guy may not have had the privilege of being trained with us, we are thinking of the bigger picture.
@steve32221 Жыл бұрын
It looks like the Drydex shrunk again after you dried it. I know time is a factor in video so I think the method is solid but the material got you. Love your videos and your skate stuff!
@andrewssd Жыл бұрын
If you rolled a wall, you have to touch up using a nap roller to avoid flashing. If you touch up a spot on a rolled wall with a brush , it comes out shiner because the brush doesn't produce stippling.
@ryanmuir6338 Жыл бұрын
After feathering out sanding of the patch, I use a painting sea sponge, pre moistened of course, and the touch up is invisible given that I'm using the same can of paint the wall was painted with
@PeterEnglish Жыл бұрын
I've had decent results using an old children's paintbrush (like an artist's brush) to dab the paint on - not wiping the paint on with the side of the bristles but dabbing with the end of the bristles, using a fairly dry brush.
@gettin-stuffdunn6028 Жыл бұрын
13:12 If we get to the point where the wall paint needs WiFi, we're doomed - haha. No longer a matter of "if the walls could talk" instead "the walls are listening." BTW - thanks for feathering that edge.
@EyeOfScrutinyАй бұрын
Great Video. Thanks.
@mothersson2002 Жыл бұрын
You mentioned you didn't recommend using the quickset type to do this. I am wondering during why not?
@Gride97827817 ай бұрын
Been watching your other for years. Didn’t expect to see you here lol
@dtacklind Жыл бұрын
I wonder what would happen if you pressed a hot rag on the dent? Would the dent swell and flatten again?
@peep39 Жыл бұрын
I've been using drydex lately and I like it
@W.E.A.S.A.H Жыл бұрын
Dammm man small world eh? No way I found the skater guy in KZread for carpentry. God bless you Ben
@BabyBane1231 Жыл бұрын
Helpful! Thanks. 💪👍
@MuahMan6 ай бұрын
Who has to skim coat and paint the entire wall just to fix a nail hole?
@stephenledford3808 Жыл бұрын
Here is a tip for you Vancouver...87 cent Foam brush but add floetrol to the paint so is self levels out.
@LisaMartin44 Жыл бұрын
I ‘m sure you have addressed this in other videos but what about using a sponge rather than sand paper?
@mok4191 Жыл бұрын
Hey Ben I'm pretty sure like in your video about covering only parts of floors in a room with alot of windows, the paint changes color immediately when exposed to UV light. Not sure anyone is gonna be able to fix that! But I guess "hope springs eternal" lol! Good vid though, Thanx Bro!
@grimreefer213 Жыл бұрын
The only way to avoid having the paint flash is to use a flat or eggshell paint. Anything more than that is going to be difficult to touch up. I’m doing a commercial building now and satin bathrooms got patched everywhere so I have to roll the walls entirely again. If you have sizable patches then spot prime multiple times especially with colors like blue or green it’s a terrible color for hiding things. And it depends on the lighting if people will see imperfections, if you’re doing a dark theatre room then you can get away with more
@dooshnukem32
Жыл бұрын
For colored walls where I can get away with touchups, it helps a ton to tint the primer a bit with some of the finish color. Doesn't help with flashing, but I can usually finish with just one good coat of color.
@grimreefer213
Жыл бұрын
@@dooshnukem32 Yep if we have dark walls to do we’ll often use tinted primer, sometimes we don’t have it but it helps. Especially if you need to one coat something definitely use tinted primer. I was in a building once and there was an office with a dark royal blue sort of color, the GC was on the other side of the wall and put a hammer or something straight through the wall. So it got a massive patch on the wall and it took like two days trying to get this wall to look right. We had to prime it several times and then paint it, it didn’t look right so we skim coated it again and did it again. It was a nightmare for this particular wall for some reason, so that’s why I worry about patches sometimes.
@treytoshaglover95075 ай бұрын
Use a brush, cover the area with paint, then take the tip of the brush and tap it into the repair and work your way out adding stippling and texture also feathering it in with the surrounding area. I commercial painted for 13 years and you can make even larger areas virtually disappear. most untrained eyes will even miss it if done right. the key is blending it with the existing paint .
@steveknievel Жыл бұрын
Thanks Ben 👍👍
@ThaGreatestAlexander Жыл бұрын
i usually just put it on without being super fussy about metal touching, clean with a warm wet rag to bring it small as possible and then final sand and paint
@lincolndickerson1293 Жыл бұрын
Great technique for matching the texture. I literally frowned when you said you can’t match paint later. Oddly my house has white walls throughout and matching white trim. Not my decision I bought it this this way. My concern is to fix the minor dents throughout means painting a whole floor. 😱 I will be ok, I will be okay, I will be okay… lolol
@vancouvercarpenter
Жыл бұрын
You can get a good enough color match to not have to paint all the walls but you will need to go corner to corner for the wall that needs repair.
@lincolndickerson1293
Жыл бұрын
@@vancouvercarpenter Thanks! That is good to know.
@Smuddpie
Жыл бұрын
But if you don't like the white, why not change it? I lived with colors I hated for a year once when we bought a house. I was busy having a baby and just couldn't get to it. Once we changed it, it made such a difference in how I felt about and in the house that I decided I would never again live with a color I hated.
@lincolndickerson1293
Жыл бұрын
@@Smuddpie I actually have come to prefer the white. My frown was because since there is no color change I may have to paint a very large area so it doesnt look off.
@isadean6 ай бұрын
Did you prime your repairs or go straight to paint?
Пікірлер: 345
For small paint touch-ups like that, one method that worked well for me is to apply the paint with a brush, then roll a DRY roller over it. It will pick up the excess paint (if any) and imprint the roller texture in the paint 🙂
@steve32221
Жыл бұрын
Exactly. Works great at removing any edges.
@lwilton
Жыл бұрын
What he was doing is called "stippling". You can do this with a paint brush. You only get the front 1/4" or so if the bristles wet, and then you use the point of the brush, pushing it repeatedly against the wall as he was doing the roller end. For something this small it would be best to use a 1/2" fairly stiff bristle brush, or alternately just one end of a 4" brush. Dry rolling, as you discovered, is a really good way to help clean the end result up.
@gregh988
Жыл бұрын
Yes! This is my go to technique
@gregh988
Жыл бұрын
Yes! This is my go to technique
@gregh988
Жыл бұрын
Yes! This is my go to technique
Ben, I like that you decided to try using a "mini" roller to touch-up a few areas on your wall in this video. I recently used a sponge dipped in a litttle paint and it did a good job of restoring the "stipple" texture of the wall too!
I was going to attempt a small repair behind a door with a paint brush but I will definitely be using a roller now instead, there was another more visible dent that I was going to leave but I will see how well I can fill the first hole. Thank you for the great informative vid!
The pink stuff is great for fixing dents. I use those cheap disposable foam brushes for dabbing paint on patches. It leaves a good texture. If the patch is a large one and the texture does not match the original wall I wait for the paint to be nearly dry then I deliberately dab on it with the foam brush or a regular brush to mess up the smoothness of the fresh paint. If it still looks too smooth after I put more paint and deliberately mess it up too until I’m happy with the texture. Doesn’t always work but it’s usually less noticeable.
“Paint Conspiracy”😮. 🤣😂 I love how relaxed and light hearted all your videos are. This was a great one as I’m sure everyone has touch ups from time to time. Thanks for a great channel with great content. Very appreciated.
A trick I’ve used with success after repairing and sanding filled spots smooth is to stipple the smooth surface with either primer or the color coat using just the end of the brush bristles to avoid the spot from looking too smooth. This also helps before rolling the wall with all new paint. I also use a perpendicular scraper to catch and remove any and all raised bits from the previous painting before applying the new coat.
Ben you're a master at this kind of work and even better at making these tutorials. Top quality content on the subject
You are Awesome! I learn so much from your channel. I take what I learn from you and use it on the job. My best to you.
Thanks for the video. I was always under the assumption you would have to sand the surrounding paint as well before repainting over but by the look of it the paint will stick to the prior coat anyway.
Thanks Ben that video was a hoot!!! You have helped me tremendously with my projects and I just wanted to say thanks 👍👍
What you have done with the paint is called stippling. Can be done with either a brush or roller. Also paints with sheen will flatten over time. Thinning the touch up paint substantially with water can help match the sheen
@jayzee2390
Жыл бұрын
Joe B, are you a painter?
@dirkdiggler9379
Жыл бұрын
To match the old wall stipple I add some powder bag mud to my first coat of primer to thicken The more stipple you need the more bag mud you add. Works like a charm. I’ve been repairing wet plaster walls in historic homes using this technique for 25 years
Thanks bro, I've been getting tips from you for about 2 years now. I've started my own Plastering business in New Zealand since then and we're growing fast. I wish i could return the favor by donating through your live streams etc. All in all, kinda just wanted to thank you my guy, you're the man.
@ronnymcdonald2543
Жыл бұрын
Bro if yr in business in NZ yr here to make $$$ and time is $$$ - Im a builder and when do touch ups like this I putty / filler, overfill and whack an electric sander on it then quick roll with a matched paint - Result excellent. That's way too much work for such a simple quick fix.
@Longtack55
Ай бұрын
Where are you mate?
Your attention to detail is awesome 👏🏽. Even the seemingly simple jobs can be done better! Thanks man!
I'm a big fan of your skating channel and was looking to fix up my house a bit before selling. Thanks for the video legend!
So this may sound odd but I have fluffed up and used a Q Tip in the past. I roll the paint on with it and have been happy with results! Obviously this works on small spots. Also for sanding, I've just used a paper towel or even fingers in the past. Just my input:)
@gonnfishy2987
7 ай бұрын
Neat advice, it has helped me!
Heck yeah Ben, I’m on break at a side job rn rippin dabs and skimming walls. Keep up the great work. Always Super helpful and entertaining.
Hi. A painter suggest a tip for me when filling in holes. He said instead of sanding it to use a small damp cloth and wipe over it. Doing so wipes all the extra filler off the sides and leaves the holes filled in perfectly. No sanding required.
@Bapuji42
7 ай бұрын
That's exactly what I do, especially if there's texture. Sometimes I just use my thumb.
@joshyaash
6 ай бұрын
@@Bapuji42 Definitely sanded some patches like this with my thumb haha. Works just fine if I'm just getting the walls ready for the paint crew
@Bapuji42
6 ай бұрын
@@joshyaash For real, you don't want to get too formal about spackle.
@TheSpecKK
5 ай бұрын
Last pink stuff I applied says it’s silica. Not good for your skin, even worse for your lungs, so wet cloth finish is faster and safer.
For the paint I sometimes use a super soft ladies large makeup brush with just the very tips of the fine bristles dabbed with the original paint (original mix if possible!). I gently dab this on the wall (never brushing!) and touching the wall very delicately. Do this multiple times but work away from the repaired spot to fan out using less dabs and paint as you move away from the repair. If the original paint on the wall is not too old this is generally quite effective. If the spot in question is not in the normal line of sight and not subject to bright light flooding it, the result should please the homeowner and avoid you/them having to paint the whole wall.
Good tips! Another good tip I've picked up is simply to use masking tape around the area prior to starting
Brilliant tips I’m stealing the roller dabbing technique! Love your attention to detail Also loving lots of the comments with more great tips thanks everyone 👍
Unfortunately with the right (or wrong) angle and natural light almost any touch up is noticeable no matter what you do if the sheen is Satin or Semi. With eggshell or flat paint you have a decent chance in the right light. People are so picky these days we usually just reroll the wall (or try to feather and hide the edge above a window or door). The other thing I’ve noticed over the years is that the more uniform the patch the easier it is to spot; whereas, non-uniform patches tend not to catch the eye. Basically people just need to fill up the room with furniture and pictures and quit focusing on tiny imperfections. Drives us nuts!
@vancouvercarpenter
Жыл бұрын
100%
@Beany87
10 ай бұрын
Not sure minimalists will agree but as a hoarder I concur! 🤣😂
@MrJwyne
8 ай бұрын
Seriously, some customers want a flawless unnoticeable patch. It does drive us nuts.
Great video as always Ben. My technique is a little different. I fill and use a damp sponge to remove the dry leftover mud adjacent to the hole. I then dab the paint and use the same damp sponge to “feather” the paint around the edges. It’s 90%+ perfection and never end to paint the whole wall.
@vancouvercarpenter
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing!
@EricLS
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, on a textured wall, the wet sponge will make it literally impossible to find the hole. I left my last rental before I bought my place, and the landlord was floored how perfect we left the place
@joe800096
Жыл бұрын
Ed; I ve done this as well the sponge works really well for small blend in areas.
@gflopez1127
5 ай бұрын
thats what I do and it works great!!
@saddestchord7622
3 ай бұрын
I've used artist's brushes and sponges. I like sponges more.
Love the painting videos! Hope you make more 👍
Very nice vid…very helpful! I’ve got a trouble spot on my ceiling that needs some attention…but it just might be easier to move…LOL! Thanks for the info!
Awesome tips! I've had good success with those little foam brushes and just dab with it. I'll mix my paint really well and then use the foam brush to push the excess paint on my mixing spatula back into the can and whatever is left on the foam brush i take even more off and then just dab the touch up area. I barely use any paint and it has come out great every time! those brushes are super cheap but I'm even cheaper and I just wash the brush with just warm water and let it dry and put it in a ziplock and reuse the same one.
@argentotenebre
Жыл бұрын
Me too bro, buy them in bulk and they’re like 20-30 cents each
I use the same dabbing method, but with one of those little sausage foam rollers that have a rounded end. You can easily control the surface area covered.
Excellent demonstration and advice👍
earned the hard way. I painted my kitchen last winter. Touched up a few spots after removing an outlet cover (which tore up the first applied paint in the winter) and the new touchup paint went on differently. Shadowy. Just realized painting in different temperatures will yield different results
Thanks for the tips now hopefully this works so i dont have to paint whole wall.Bought house and people had frames and curtains everywhere.When they moved out they left holes everywhere but paint was still good condition other than holes.Thanks saved me money and time
We record all paint type& colour codes / application methods (spray/brush&roll nap) on record. This is part of our service and lowers our cost on future calls from client. Thanks for your great video tutorials.
Glad he called out the fact you can't get 100% unless you do the full routine. That is true particularly if a) the paint has been around a while (and oxidized, changing the colour over time) and/or the wall is exposed to sun much of the time (which fades colours). Depends on your need to match....
Great job! It blends very well and it is hard to find where the patch is!
You really are the drywalliest carpenter. Lol. But I learned a lot from this one! And even got some further great tips from the other comments. :)
As a painting contractor i do touchups quite often. The hardest part is getting a really good match, it needs to be the exact color AND sheen. I have a tinting kit that I carry in my van, and if its a tough sheeen Ill buy two paints, one too shiny and and another too flat and mix until i get it just right. Once you get the paint PERFECT you can touch it up however you want, although spraying works really well to fan out the hard edges. Dry rolling can work as well.
@Smuddpie
Жыл бұрын
That's skill. Hats off to you!
@dirkdiggler9379
Жыл бұрын
@@readhistory2023 did you even read his comment ?
@justice4g
Жыл бұрын
when I had too much sheen on some touch ups I found a light sand after painting would bring it back to match the original
Talk about old-school. I'm the guy that planted the old-growth. I enjoy your videos. Keep up the good work.
I like to use masking tape to go around the small damage. It allows me to apply the mud without touching the wall with the small trowel. Then remove the tape and add more to do the sanding. I use a hobbie brush to do the prime and paint.
Some (big box?) hardware stores sell single-use spray cans. That is, it is a jar with an attached aerosol sprayer. Pour your paint in the jar, then spray. If paint tint matching is a challenge, spraying with your "close match" new paint but feathering it out via spraying may be an option.
For filling tiny holes I do the surgical approach, I will put blue tape across the hole, Cut out the exact shape of the hole (cut the hole first to make it easier), Press mud into the hole and use the knife to pull across the tape. Then remove the tape and you are left with a perfect slightly proud fill, without any buildup, And the knife never touches the wall. When the mud dries and shrinks just a hair gently scrape with a razor blade to get it down to level, As for painting I usually gently dab it with a Q-tip evenly distributing across and slightly over the repair
@DrDRE4391
5 ай бұрын
I use the same method, but I sand with the blue tape intact. Once you sand to see see some sanding of the blue tape, clean and paint.
Actually a good video for tiny patches. One thing to mention (I skipped through so not sure if this was mentioned) this will really only work if you use the EXACT same paint left over from actually painting the wall in the first place. If you have to get a new tub of paint, even if it’s the same brand and colour if it’s a different tub of paint it will always be a slightly different shade. Actually as I’m typing this … he mentioned this exact point … side note when he says ‘flashing’ or ‘flash’ that’s a decorators term for the Sheen difference that you will get on a big patch job. Also if you are patching over fresh filler it’s best to double coat it so the filler doesn’t flash. Really good video 🤘🏼🙋🏻♂️
I use a washing dishes sponge and works very well as well... thank you for the tips
6:43 I love the mini brush but it's so important to mix your paint really well. Even for spot repairs so that hopefully the sheen is a bit closer. The dulling agent usually settles to the bottom. Stir it baby!
@dirkdiggler9379
Жыл бұрын
The dulling agent ? Flat paint has more sand and less acrylic
8:39 Ben, these videos are so well done, thank you. Just trying to find one of your videos that will demonstrate how to fix a “big dent” - the wall has a large indent /cracked from a person falling against it as they fell down the steps!
Quick set DAP putty is really good for small drywall repairs and filling nail holes on trim.
This works for me. I use an old plastic credit card as a putty (lightweight spackle) knife and a small piece of sponge to apply the paint.
2 hours after fixing these little dents the kids made a bigger hole in the wall. You can never fix all of these little imperfections in life so don't worry about it.
@heckingbamboozled8097
29 күн бұрын
If you're in an apartment with a deposit, it's very relevant.
That was pretty helpful. I’ll follow your tips. Cheers.
You just HAD to feather that paint edge didn’t you!….drywall addict! Lol Thanks for all your incredibly descriptive tips bro. You definitely help me.
There is a few products that will touch up as you'd hope but it also depends on the colour and sheen. It's worth a shot to see if it passes. Have had good luck on walls with Super 2 low sheen egg from Cloverdale myself, also the Behr paints I think.
I generally take my sand paper and run across the concrete to dull the paper. It really helps with scratches.
@bill360
Жыл бұрын
Good tip
Love your videos, you’re awesome
Nice tip, thanks! Any thoughts on the problem we face in Switzerland which is never ever ever ever being able to match the same shade of white?
You're an artist!
Thanks so much for explaining and showing this was helpful
I have had reason to do a reasonable amount of this sort of patch and paint over the last two years or so. My method patch and sand with 220 grit, but take the sanded area beyond the patch. I think, at least to some degree, the material used can make a difference. In my case I'm using Benjamin Moore paint and for painting I use a foam brush just to get the paint onto the wall. When I started this process I used the standard mini foam roller, but I found was the texture was not the same as a regular standard wall roller. Makes sense right!? What I bought (HD) and left on my bench for quite some time is a 3" fibre roller kit from an outfit called Pintar, the model?, but called "Quick fix & small area kit." I tend to roll out the paint 3-4" in roughly a circle. I have found once I have done this, thou sometimes two coats, I literally can not see the patch. The texture is near identical to original. The one draw back to this little roller is, the handle and axle is plastic. To release the end hub one has to pinch the end of the axle slightly. With paint on the roller and very tight space it can be done, but it can be awfully annoying at times. On the packaging it also mentions good for trim work, which is actually why I purchased it in the first place, and it is. Far superior, and quicker, finish especially for those larger flat sections than any brush. This roller does a good job conforming to some of the not so deep moulded areas. Am I cheerleading this product, yes. I am not associated with the company in any way. This, in my opinion at least, is a product that does a really good job, thou of course it will depend on the skill of the user too.
I find using a foam brush to be good in a situation like this. Foam brushes have a point at the end, so you can control the paint to very small tight areas, but it also gives a finish similar to a roller.
I got Lowes to color match my paint. It was slightly darker. I ended up repainting the whole wall. It is 100 percent. The color was close enough to be only needed on the one wall.
Friendly Tip! I would have used a plastic yellow putty knife. Water down putty. Avoid sanding. Use an artist brush or a small foam pad. The Gooseneck Guy! Inventor of the Gooseneck paint brush. Cheers!
Throw away 1” foam brushes are the best for this technique. I’m just a DIY guy, but I came up with exactly the same method on my own, including the curled sand paper and the dabbing.
Good tip VC. Thanks!
Can you do a video on how to find a good contractor, where to look, what to ask, what research should be done (like price research)? I’d say finding a good company to do the work is the biggest challenge as a new homeowner
@dooshnukem32
Жыл бұрын
Check out a channel called The Honest Carpenter - another contractor turned DIY guru. He put out a great video a few months back about this very topic. I'd still enjoy Ben's take on it tho 🙂
If you use a razor blade for small homes it puts the Drydex in perfectly on smooth wall and because you have so little leverage on the tiny blade you don’t smoosh and change the paint texture around it
I used a paint formulated with nanobots which detects inconsistencies and reconstitutes itself whenever I ding the walls, which is constantly. The only problem is that my house is now self aware and is evicting me because I'm so clumsy. I managed to delay it by threatening a DIY move out but it's only a matter of time at this point
@talitherose
3 ай бұрын
🤣
Still learning at 82! Thanks for letting me know that it will not be perfect on mu first job/try.
I just spent weeks mudding a ceiling. did the prep work filling the joints. applied tape. mudded and feathered. sanded. where there were gaps to either side of the tape I'd fill with mud, sand, repeat. Must have done that 8 or 9 times (yeah, I'm not good at this but had great success with one joint in a bathroom so wife said I was going to do the whole bedroom ceiling). Anyway, now I've painted the ceiling and can clearly see all joints. no definite mud edges but the bump creates a shadow. 2 questions. Will enough paint along the tape on either side fix this or do I have to rough up paint and add more mud?
Any reason you wouldn’t surround the ding with painters tape to protect the wall while you sand?
sometimes I just finger paint to avoid brush marks, also when I have a higher sheen on touch ups a light sand can bring it back to match
I feel like I'm watching Bob Ross. Very mellow video. Great tips.
Just thinking outside of the box, a dappled faux finish on a new wall means you’ll never see minute differences on a solid one- color wall. Of course, most people want to live inside of the box.
I realized right when you showed how it turned out. That the reason people in general do so many videos. Is because they like to hear there own voice.
I was taught to use caulking and spread it with a 5 in 1 for little dings that small. It’s quick and it’s unnoticeable once painted. The caulking sinks in so you don’t even have to sand down anything.
The pink stuff is not suposed to «flash» (show were you did patch) but sometimes it will. I don’t take a chance and I always cover with a primer/sealer before paint. Your idea of using the point of the small roller is good, at least it gives a texture to the paint that will match the one already there. Doing those touch ups are tricky, you have to do them with the same paint you applied the first time. If it’s in a house overtime you will get a thin coat of grease on walls so as soon as you do a repair and paint, it will show. White walls are the easiest, coloured walls the most complicated to «spot paint». Cheers!
Roller did a nice job. I would also think Q-tip, or dabbing with a cloth would do better thana brush. Thanks!
Nice work !
Even if your paint blends in perfectly you have to consider the condition of the wall. If you put a patch on it then the texture will show differently, the patch will be flat but the wall may be textured. Also if the walls are dirty then that messes up your touch up, so at this job i’m at now i’m doing the punch list and I have to get in like 10 different paints and “touch up” many different areas. I’m on a deadline so I have to try to blend it but i’m gonna end up having to paint entire walls which is a pain in the ass. These walls were painted like a month ago but they’re already dirty and discolored because of other trades working there
@VancoverCarpenter thanks this video. What if you use a paper towel or rag to dab the wall?
Just found you! Do you have tips for repairing wall corners? As in small chunks taken out from moving furniture etc? I find corners challenging! Thanks 😊
It might be good to say that it very much depends on the product that you used on the wall. There are paints that you can touch up with that get zero flashing almost no matter how you do it. Also once you get into eggshell, satin, or semi even the small patches that you did would show very easily with the higher sheens. The newer versions of the computer matching machines are doing better, but most stores don't have them. They can get 98%. So depending on which pigments go into your paint and how much pigment is used you can color match and touch up with it.
@BlossomPainting
Жыл бұрын
I record all paint codes/application method (nap/brush/spray) on internal records. Part of lowering costs if ever called upon.
@jaredscott2617
Жыл бұрын
@@BlossomPainting first off I love how your name is painting. Second im not sure how that information is relevent for touch up. Its very obvious which method was used when you are touching up. Thirdly you should always give the client a record of paint color and product. Lastly are you a bot?
@BlossomPainting
Жыл бұрын
@@jaredscott2617 1st, thanks. 2nd, it’s not always obvious to the next guy (less room for error WHEN touching up). 3rd, Internal records also show up on clients invoice. And NO , we are not a bot.
@jaredscott2617
Жыл бұрын
@@BlossomPainting "we are not a bot" sounds sus to me. How many base belong to you? All? You need to train the next guy better if he cant tell between brush, roll, or spray.
@BlossomPainting
Жыл бұрын
@@jaredscott2617 the next guy may not have had the privilege of being trained with us, we are thinking of the bigger picture.
It looks like the Drydex shrunk again after you dried it. I know time is a factor in video so I think the method is solid but the material got you. Love your videos and your skate stuff!
If you rolled a wall, you have to touch up using a nap roller to avoid flashing. If you touch up a spot on a rolled wall with a brush , it comes out shiner because the brush doesn't produce stippling.
After feathering out sanding of the patch, I use a painting sea sponge, pre moistened of course, and the touch up is invisible given that I'm using the same can of paint the wall was painted with
I've had decent results using an old children's paintbrush (like an artist's brush) to dab the paint on - not wiping the paint on with the side of the bristles but dabbing with the end of the bristles, using a fairly dry brush.
13:12 If we get to the point where the wall paint needs WiFi, we're doomed - haha. No longer a matter of "if the walls could talk" instead "the walls are listening." BTW - thanks for feathering that edge.
Great Video. Thanks.
You mentioned you didn't recommend using the quickset type to do this. I am wondering during why not?
Been watching your other for years. Didn’t expect to see you here lol
I wonder what would happen if you pressed a hot rag on the dent? Would the dent swell and flatten again?
I've been using drydex lately and I like it
Dammm man small world eh? No way I found the skater guy in KZread for carpentry. God bless you Ben
Helpful! Thanks. 💪👍
Who has to skim coat and paint the entire wall just to fix a nail hole?
Here is a tip for you Vancouver...87 cent Foam brush but add floetrol to the paint so is self levels out.
I ‘m sure you have addressed this in other videos but what about using a sponge rather than sand paper?
Hey Ben I'm pretty sure like in your video about covering only parts of floors in a room with alot of windows, the paint changes color immediately when exposed to UV light. Not sure anyone is gonna be able to fix that! But I guess "hope springs eternal" lol! Good vid though, Thanx Bro!
The only way to avoid having the paint flash is to use a flat or eggshell paint. Anything more than that is going to be difficult to touch up. I’m doing a commercial building now and satin bathrooms got patched everywhere so I have to roll the walls entirely again. If you have sizable patches then spot prime multiple times especially with colors like blue or green it’s a terrible color for hiding things. And it depends on the lighting if people will see imperfections, if you’re doing a dark theatre room then you can get away with more
@dooshnukem32
Жыл бұрын
For colored walls where I can get away with touchups, it helps a ton to tint the primer a bit with some of the finish color. Doesn't help with flashing, but I can usually finish with just one good coat of color.
@grimreefer213
Жыл бұрын
@@dooshnukem32 Yep if we have dark walls to do we’ll often use tinted primer, sometimes we don’t have it but it helps. Especially if you need to one coat something definitely use tinted primer. I was in a building once and there was an office with a dark royal blue sort of color, the GC was on the other side of the wall and put a hammer or something straight through the wall. So it got a massive patch on the wall and it took like two days trying to get this wall to look right. We had to prime it several times and then paint it, it didn’t look right so we skim coated it again and did it again. It was a nightmare for this particular wall for some reason, so that’s why I worry about patches sometimes.
Use a brush, cover the area with paint, then take the tip of the brush and tap it into the repair and work your way out adding stippling and texture also feathering it in with the surrounding area. I commercial painted for 13 years and you can make even larger areas virtually disappear. most untrained eyes will even miss it if done right. the key is blending it with the existing paint .
Thanks Ben 👍👍
i usually just put it on without being super fussy about metal touching, clean with a warm wet rag to bring it small as possible and then final sand and paint
Great technique for matching the texture. I literally frowned when you said you can’t match paint later. Oddly my house has white walls throughout and matching white trim. Not my decision I bought it this this way. My concern is to fix the minor dents throughout means painting a whole floor. 😱 I will be ok, I will be okay, I will be okay… lolol
@vancouvercarpenter
Жыл бұрын
You can get a good enough color match to not have to paint all the walls but you will need to go corner to corner for the wall that needs repair.
@lincolndickerson1293
Жыл бұрын
@@vancouvercarpenter Thanks! That is good to know.
@Smuddpie
Жыл бұрын
But if you don't like the white, why not change it? I lived with colors I hated for a year once when we bought a house. I was busy having a baby and just couldn't get to it. Once we changed it, it made such a difference in how I felt about and in the house that I decided I would never again live with a color I hated.
@lincolndickerson1293
Жыл бұрын
@@Smuddpie I actually have come to prefer the white. My frown was because since there is no color change I may have to paint a very large area so it doesnt look off.
Did you prime your repairs or go straight to paint?
Looks good from here!