Home
Renovation - How to Paint Ceilings
Painting a ceiling is one of the more challenging
paint jobs. Paint drips onto your face and onto the floor. The
angle makes it more difficult to use a brush or even a roller
on a pole. A ladder is often needed. Even the lighting is
different. To top it off, ceilings are sometimes texture
coated. How can you deal with all these difficulties to get a
good final result?
How to Paint a Ceiling -The first
step to overcoming those hurdles is proper paint
selection and using the right tools with it.
Paints come in a variety of types. Oil and latex
are only the two broadest categories. Finish is important, too.
High gloss will create lots of light reflection, giving the room a
very bright look as light from lamps bounces off it. Flat paint
will give a much more subtle look.
But beyond these overall types, there are
specialty paints used for certain ceilings, such as those with
texture coating or acoustic tile. The latter is sometimes used in
rooms or areas set aside for home entertainment.
If the ceiling is textured
with stucco-like plaster, brushing and rolling are out. The
texture will simply crumble off. Spraying becomes mandatory. That
creates the need for good ventilation and some extra skill. Using a
sprayer is more difficult than it looks. The paint has to be just
the right consistency. Otherwise, the sprayer either gums up, or
the paint sprays out like water.
Next, it's important to decide whether primer is
needed. For most new surfaces, it's essential. Many more top coats
would be needed without it. Also, ceilings are especially prone to
water damage. So, a primer becomes a great tool to help hide
discolorations that would show through the top coat without one. It
also helps provide a good surface to keep paint adhering well. That
will help reduce drips.
To reduce dripping in general, make sure to mix
paint with the right consistency. You can test the result partially
by painting part of a small vertical surface, such as the inside of
a closet. Gravity is still working against you, so if the paint is
too thin (or too thick), it will run down the wall. On a ceiling,
that would be a drip.
Working at the right speed helps reduce
dripping, as well as saves your neck and shoulders from excess
strain. For most ceilings, a long extension pole will allow you to
apply paint with minimal neck effort.
Keep the pole extended at a
slight angle. That keeps your head at a more
comfortable angle while keeping any drips or splatters from falling
straight down on you. Just don't extend it too far out. A large
angle makes the pole and roller feel much heavier.
Fortunately, most ceilings are smooth and
undamaged and have few angles or fixtures. That makes preparation
easier and painting quicker. A few dozen strokes with a roller on a
pole will do most ceilings, making the hard part of an interior
paint job brief.
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