Skim coating a painted wall? - Printable Version +- Woodnet Forums (https://forums.woodnet.net) +-- Thread: Skim coating a painted wall? (/showthread.php?tid=7253104) Pages:
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Re: Skim coating a painted wall? - Lynden - 03-31-2016 Cooler said: Use a regular paint roller with a 1/2" nap and follow the other tips at the bottom of the following link. The link also has a video you can watch. http://www.texmaster.com/magictrowel.html Re: Skim coating a painted wall? Update - BillN - 04-18-2016 Finished, primed, painted, installed cabinet boxes and I need a vacation. Lessons learned: I can't work as fast as quick set mud sets up, don't run the drill too fast or I'll get bubbles in the mud. Second and third coats were diluted all purpose compound. Thanks again, Bill RE: Skim coating a painted wall? - Turner52 - 10-27-2021 I use regular lightweight mud,thinned down just a little. It has an adhesive already in so no bonding agent needed. The subsurface cannot be flaking. If that happens the top layer will come off. Don't know the level of your drywall skills. I always do 2 coats. That way I can get it perfecly smooth with no sanding. Hate sanding and it makes way too much dust. For me the second coat is worth it. RE: Skim coating a painted wall? - Snipe Hunter - 10-27-2021 (10-27-2021, 11:11 AM)stoverix Wrote: What about the designer portfolio? A weak spam attempt? RE: Skim coating a painted wall? - EricU - 10-31-2021 Vancouver carpenter on youtube adds thinned white glue if it's going over paint. I should have done that yesterday, going to have to skim coat one spot that had paint on it again because the surface is weird. RE: Skim coating a painted wall? - Stwood_ - 11-09-2021 (10-27-2021, 09:35 PM)Snipe Hunter Wrote: Yes. I don't see how these spammers think that reviving a 5 year old thread doesn't raise suspicion. |