Anybody knowledgable with painting a home wall with a roller?
-
I agree Jim, but there is some missing info to rule out other problems. I am assuming that everthing prior to applying the paint was done correctly, but I still have to ask the question. You would be amazed at the things I have seen "professionals" forget or not do. I am not saying that he did this, but without all the information, I can only make a best guess.
-
How many coats of primer did you use? Looks to me like the sheetrock just soaked up more paint in some spots than others..
then again, it could be the way they put the texture on the wall..
-
The home builder primes and paints the whole house one color, then they allow you to go in and paint walls accent colors/whatever before the flooring/trim/cabinets go in (which I did last weekend, and won't have access to it now until closing on June 19th). So I painted over their primer and 'standard' color, and all the other walls that I didn't paint over look great, so I'd assume it was primered, and correctly.
I think my error is in the fact that when I used the roller, I would roll roll roll until the roller was left with zero paint. I would paint a ~4' x 4' area until the roller ran out, then go over everything after roller was dry to smooth it out...I am assuming that is wrong. I should go until the roller is starting to thin out, then apply more paint to the roller and keep doing that until I have the wall covered, then go over the whole wall to smooth out?
-
FG2;277842 wrote:
The home builder primes and paints the whole house one color, then they allow you to go in and paint walls accent colors/whatever before the flooring/trim/cabinets go in (which I did last weekend, and won't have access to it now until closing on June 19th). So I painted over their primer and 'standard' color, and all the other walls that I didn't paint over look great, so I'd assume it was primered, and correctly.I think my error is in the fact that when I used the roller, I would roll roll roll until the roller was left with zero paint. I would paint a ~4' x 4' area until the roller ran out, then go over everything after roller was dry to smooth it out...I am assuming that is wrong. I should go until the roller is starting to thin out, then apply more paint to the roller and keep doing that until I have the wall covered, then go over the whole wall to smooth out?
Don't run the roller dry, keep it fairly wet all the time. I've never gone over the whole wall afterward.
-
Thanks for the help guys. I just called Peterson Paint as well, and they said the same thing. Just do vertical swipes of WET roller (avoiding any lines), then rewet roller and move over a bit (overlap 2-3") and do it again. He also said don't 'go back over the wall'. I will apply a liberal coat and see where it leads me, and if I still struggle, I will bite the bullet and hire someone.
Thanks to all for the helpful information. I think this is the first thread for help I have seen that didn't turn into a 5 page disaster

Take Care!
Jason
-
from all the painting I have done in my houses I always keep the roller wet and only go up and down....the "W" never worked for me...and never go over a area again after you have already painted it unless u need to remove a line and if so use very little pressure on the roller
if you are cutting in the corners or another wall you want to cut with a heavy enough coat and then roll into the cut while still wet...its hard to do if only one person is painting
-
Some of the painters will throw their roller cover in the bucket of paint to let it soak. When they are done painting they will put the cover back into the paint and leave it in there until they need it again. Usually they are using 5gallon buckets. It might be hard to do with a 1gallon bucket.
-
Raider;277849 wrote:
from all the painting I have done in my houses I always keep the roller wet and only go up and down....the "W" never worked for me...and never go over a area again after you have already painted it unless u need to remove a line and if so use very little pressure on the rollerif you are cutting in the corners or another wall you want to cut with a heavy enough coat and then roll into the cut while still wet...its hard to do if only one person is painting
I would have done the up and down method from the get go, but I was told NOT too....Then I ask around from here to Peterson Paint, and the info I got, was bad. W didn't work for me either (obviously). Thanks for your help. I did figure out how to remove the brush strokes with the roller on my own (WOOT). Thanks for the time and help!
RE-Enema;277855 wrote:
Some of the painters will throw their roller cover in the bucket of paint to let it soak. When they are done painting they will put the cover back into the paint and leave it in there until they need it again. Usually they are using 5gallon buckets. It might be hard to do with a 1gallon bucket.So they obviously get it soaked to the core with paint. I will try this method in the tray (let it sit for a few minutes one way, then rotate, then apply). Thanks as well!
-
Instead of using a tray it is much easier to use a 5 gallon bucket and a paitners grate that hangs from the bucket. Pour around a 1/2 to 3/4 of a gallon into the bucket and then just spin the roller into the paint to dip it, you can put more if your need too but a 1/4 gallon is about the minimum needed. Then use the grate to roll off some of the excess, the grate also helps to evenly spread the paint on the roller surface. Like most of the other advise that has been given earleir keep the roller pretty wet and don't try to use every bit of paint on the roller. What I like to do is get the roller plenty wet to the point of almost dripping and roll out a little square with it pretty thick to get the excess of then just use the paint on that thick square to "roll out" some more of the wall until the roller starts to dry a little then dip again. It takes some getting used to but once you get the hang of it things go by pretty quickly and you tend to get some pretty good results. You can also just use a straght up and down technique which for someone just starting out works probably best. When you are done with one coat you should dip the crap out of the roller and hang it from the grate, then wrap the bucket in a garbage bag and tie it of. With it in the bag like that you can let it sit overnight or longer if needed. Take my advise as you will, but I painted at UND for 2 summers and can't begin to tell you how many rooms I rolled out. I'm no expert by any means as there are many guys that will run circles around me. Hope this helps.
Hello! It looks like you're interested in this conversation, but you don't have an account yet.
Getting fed up of having to scroll through the same posts each visit? When you register for an account, you'll always come back to exactly where you were before, and choose to be notified of new replies (either via email, or push notification). You'll also be able to save bookmarks and upvote posts to show your appreciation to other community members.
With your input, this post could be even better 💗
Register Login