I have only removed wallpaper once in my father's restaurant, and it was easy. We used a scoring tool to make the holes, wet it down and it peeled off. Life could not be that easy here.
When we moved in I decided to move my daughters belongings into the spare bedroom, and just put her bed and other necessities in her actual bedroom. This gave me the opportunity to work in her room with minimal ankle breaking mess. Being that my daughter is a teenager, she wanted her room black. Being that I am a normal self respecting home owner, I wanted her room, um, not black. So we compromised. She choose blue and black. Since she likes to draw we decided to paint the lower portion of the room and the trim the brightest blue she could find, and the upper portion black, but with chalkboard paint so she can draw, and inevitably write all of the vulgar things a 16 year old can think of all over her room. We started here:
From *~*D.I.Y. Dreamhouse*~* |
I began with a scoring tool, some enzyme wallpaper remover and a scraper. I found there to be wallpaper placed directly on drywall, that was painted over. This was not a fun project. I spent hours all summer slowly peeling away the top layer of painted wallpaper that the remover would not penetrate, only to find more work underneath.
From *~*D.I.Y. Dreamhouse*~* |
Areas of the wall crumbled, sometimes i removed too much and ended up damaging a part of the drywall.
From *~*D.I.Y. Dreamhouse*~* |
It was not a pleasant experience. The project finally ended early September, after 2.5 months of stripping. I was able to strip all of the wallpaper with the exception of a small area around her built in desk. This is the same area where I damaged the drywall. So I am anticipating a lot of work there too. I opted to finish the rest of the room so she could move into it before school started, and worry about that corner later.
We invested in a laser level that will work around corners, which was a great investment to say the least. We marked the walls, and Kris and I completed the painting of the room.
And to think, I have an entire house left to do still.
No comments:
Post a Comment