Been a painter for 25 years ,all my cutting in is free hand ,I never user silicone unless its for around a bath or a sink ( because its not paintable ) ,its a nightmare when silicone man has put this this stuff everywhere ,it needs to come off and replaced with paintable caulk ,all floors are sealed with plastic dust sheets masked up then cotton dust sheets ,this stops any paint touching the floor and you can make as much mess as you want until the job is complete. Never compromise on your standards ,its what makes you good at what you do ,good luck and happy brush monkeying
I didn’t paint before this video but the algorithm got me and after watching… I all of a sudden got inspired to try these tricks 🤔 level 100 master in the making, thank you 🙂
I've been a painter for 14 year's and the brush dripping paint is a easy solution that requires nothing more than properly regularly pushing excess paint off your brush from the top of the bucket from all four sides of the brush everytime you dunk your brush into the paint.
@@MrAdomus Yeah, we professional painters rarely use masking tape to cut in and make straight lines. We rely on our steady hand and masking tape is used for things like keeping overspray off of clear coated woodwork when rolling walls.
Most of these tricks are only needed if you don't know what your doing and you are doing small home repairs or if you are buying cheap tools. The spackling tip is just not a good way to fill holes. On a real job you are going to have hundreds if not thousands of screw indents on the sheetrock and filling that tin bag is just not going to cut it. It's why we have tools to spackle with and 50 - 80 pound buckets of spackle to carry around. Its a nice trick if you have no tools though. The tape and the roller are just problems of cheaping out on tools. Good rollers sleeves don't leave stuff on the wall. In fact this roller sleeve in this video is either horrible or not supposed to be used for that type of application. The tape in this video is just cheap blue tape. I've always used frog tape and I don't jave to spend extra time going around all the edges of the tape. Just spend the extra dollar or two on the frog tape and you won't ever need to do this. As for the cutting in of a faucet. If you have the faucet off you will never even need to cut in in the first place. I also don't know who is painting their counter tops now a day or ever but he I guess it's a neat trick. Then their is the cutting in trick. I just gotta say that this trick is just the worst of them all. If you are doing cuts on anything you should be using an angled brush. No professional painter is going to take the time to tape a brush and basically ruin that brush for all other applications over just buying a angled brush. These tip are not going to make you a good painter. Sorry to the video creator but these tip are trash.
Not going to lie....You took the words right out of my mouth.....Not to mention the tape is almost never used by real painters. Everything is free hand cutting in, and or they have Actual cut in tools, But when i see someone using Masking tape I know immediately they are NOT professional unless its for hinges and widows. The Roller sleeve he had was 3 dollars and NOONE will take the time to put lubricant on something...Just carry a damp cloth with you and clean your mess right away and re cut. LOL this video was good for a laugh however.
Agree with Kyle and ChroneSRT here. The most cringey for me was the vaseline. I'd like to see how they wipe that stuff off fixtures without getting any smear on the freshly painted wall. just take the fixtures off before you paint.
Indeed, every single tip or trick would get you laughed off a jobsite...and those brushes and rollers naps and even the handles were the cheapest of the cheap. this guy has ZERO clue of how to paint, he cost himself a lot of wasted time and effort mainly because of that!...absolutely unbelievable, no painter with half a brain would use that manila tape to mask off with Ya don't need to mix up spackle no one does this except guys who are already mudding...simple shrink free will do the job of nail and screw holes Angled brush- Sash tool or sash brush
The plaster in the bag is for quickset and fixing holes and repairs. He didn't use a garbage bag. After using a hawk, and making a mess doing repairs to nail pops (done by a so called professional) I like it. Who cares what you pro's think.
As someone who does not paint for a living, these tips were really helpful for me. Thank you so much for sharing them. I have made all of those mistakes you illustrated!
@perfectpainter9140 Humans are suckers for hacks and tips. We can’t help ourselves. Some of the other professional painters have said the exact opposite of what you said in these comments. Painting is more patience and sensibility than technique. I painted my parents’ bedroom as a surprise while they were on a cruise. I washed the walls with Tri-sodium phosphate, and rinsed them off. I missed a spot on the ceiling in terms of not enough coverage, but other than that, it was a good paint job. It was my first time painting a room in my entire life. I knew that I had to prep the walls by cleaning them so that the paint would properly adhere. My sister just had several rooms in her house painted by a young woman who paints interiors professionally. She did a stellar job. She probably used NONE of these so-called tips. It’s lack of knowledge that leads people to seek hacks and fake “tips.” The best way to learn is to do your own projects and learn from there. The trouble is, that most people are too afraid to do big home projects. That is why they pay people big money for services that anyone can learn if they would only take the time. If you took a child between eight and ten years old, and taught him or her how to do big house projects, with accurate, step-by-step information, that child would likely be ready to earn excellent money by the time they graduated from junior high school.
1st Tip: A good tape like Frog Tape solves this problem and the adhesion gets better after a couple hours. 2nd Tip: A bowl works wonders, or buy premixed if you're lazy. Also, cheap baggies split at the seams if you try that. 3rd Tip: Only cheap covers do this. If that's what you must have, roll it mostly dry in whatever tray you're using. If it has lint that bad, it will also likely start shedding more after a few hours' use or after a washing. 4th Tip: Legit, especially for painting things that are hard to take out of the wall/ceiling such as freakin doorbell speakers. 5th Tip: Do not do this. The lid might keep paint off, but the brush will be ruined faster. Hold it at a shallow angle and do your best to keep only the end wet. For such a large surface used in this example, a mini roller is more cost effective, especially if you're just painting your house. Also, you're holding it wrong. 6th Tip: Weird, but okay. If its a water base, and you can wash it in running water, just use your hand. Wear a latex glove if you're squeamish. Besides, your hack probably wears out the cover faster, not to mention you massacred a poor mini roller. 7th Tip: DO NOT DO THIS. Unless its a two dollar brush, that little trick will ruin the brush quick. No matter what you do, brushes draw paint up into their bases. There's lots of things you can do reduce this, but the sooner this happens, the sooner you're going to need a new brush.
Excellent point about the painters tape Jinseta, waiting several hours for the tape to achieve its full adhesion at room temperature, just as leaving painters tape on too long (over 24 hours) makes it almost impossible to use without scraping.
The vaseline application is so useful! I always get get frustrated about paint getting into places that are too small or too awkward to tape off. Thanks for posting!
@@sakul899 you put the vaseline on before you paint then clean it off after the paint has dried. I think this would only work with acrylics and water colors because they are water-based and won't mix with the oily vaseline, but I could be wrong. Using painter's tape is probably a better option than vaseline, but tape can sometimes tear the surface you're lifting it from and can leave behind residue. Painter's tape isn't supposed to do this, but I've had it happen before (probably was a cheap brand). There's something called masking fluid that you can get, but imo it's difficult to work with (it's kind of like glue). And, it destroys a paint brush, so you have to use a cheap brush that you don't care about. You're supposed to just peel it off after the paint dries, but it didn't come off very easily for me when I tried it. I felt like I totally wanted my money on it.
If you're going to remove the fixture or cover to apply Vaseline to it such that you do not get any Vaseline on the wall surface before painting, why not simply paint the surface while the fixture or cover is removed and then reinstall the fixture or cover after the paint has been applied 😎
@@GravityRoller I think the tip is for people who do not want to remove the fixture first...ie if they are in a hurry and need to paint an area for a quick repair.
@@scootermom1791 Help me to understand your comment, by enlightening me as to how you go about applying 100% coverage of Vaseline to the fixture without getting ANY on the substrate ...? Hmmm ...,
I clicked cause of the thumb but really got into it. A bit of cake boss into the plaster arena...we'll done. I can't believe a vid that actually has simple solutions that looks like it would work. Brilliant.
For the caulk and tape for clean lines that can work, or you can use the original wall colour so the blue for this instance over the tape first, creates the seal, then apply your chosen color, I do this for down pipes, for quicker drying times and no build up of caulk. The caulk is good when painting clean lines to timber framings. I’ve done this for years.
Only works your way if you still have the wall color. You never still have a can of original wall color. If most of my clients did my life would be way easier.
@@myradioon haha If only! Or they say I’ve got the colour but it’s been sitting there since dawn of time and it’s as hard as concrete!! 😂 color matching is a last resort. But I hear ya!
I am a professional painter, with 30 plus years, in the business. While these are all very nice tricks, they are not applicable in professional painting. They are geared towards the home owner that likes to do their own projects. ✌🏼❤️🌱
I was always able to paint straight linesin house painting because I spent 20 years as a billboard sign painter doing letters. Pretty cool tips here though.The quality of the tools (brushes you use is very important.
You've learned over many years to control you hand tremors, predict paint direction on textures surfaces, and pushing the paint on your brush. Most people see your work thinking it's easy, but blame everything under the sun when their work doesn't come out like yours! I'm not quite at your level, but I'm getting there!
@@nasticanasta that’s my thought. Garbage products get garbage results. Usually. I’m not saying you can’t use cheaper products but come on man. That roller looked more like it came right off the sheeps back with 3/4 knapp And I’ve seen brushes like that in a 5 pac for $1 and the dollar store. Let’s be real. Your not putting icing on a cake. That was a lot more effort than I have ever seen for filling a hole But. Then again if you want to use garbage. Please just enjoy this man video. It may just help help you.. I mean you’ll. Only have $3.00 invested lol
@@nasticanasta I didn’t say I approved of the tools they used here; clearly it was shit.(You should never buy a roller cover that you have to run tape over it to remove the shit falling off of it. I never really needed tape to create straight lines that looked good; because of my years of sign painting.But I can see the use in some of the things in the video to help out if you don’t know what you’re doing.
To use Vaseline around the door handle you’ve essentially got to cut in the Vaseline otherwise the paint won’t stick to the wall so if your willing to cut in maybe just cut in the paint. Or remove the handle lol
I am a painter & varnisher by profession. I did a 3 year apprenticeship and have been doing the job for over 20 years. Many things from the video are explained incorrectly. 1. The Tape edge is painted with the same color as the background and painted with any color after drying. There you have straight lines. Definitely not with silicone. 2. New tool, wash with warm water before use. 3.Door handles are removed before painting instead of treating them with Vaseline. The video gives me the crisis. Greetings from Germany.
What? Did you even watch the video? These are just helpful tricks for getting lint off rollers and Masking and stuff. There's nothing technique related about them.
@beantea5592 if you know how to paint these tips are useless. Vaseline will contaminate your brush and paint, taping a roller will just compromise its integrity, and you would never use a thick roller like that on interior walls and applying silicone to tape will render all areas with it unpaintable because paint will flake off
@jonam4038 that's probobly why he applied the Vaseline to a metal fixture that's never going to be painted. You can remove Vaseline from brushes with mineral sprits. The purpose of showing the roller was only to demonstrate how to remove lint and there's no way tape is going to compromise the integrity of it unless you're using duct tape or something absurd like that.
I work on a ship, a lot of painting maintenance, already learned a couple of it through experience trial and errors, but i wished i watched this video long ago.
For the first video, don't use caulking. Simply paint the line back with the first colour. Allow the blue to bleed though (thus giving you blue on blue). When dry (and therefore has sealed the gaps), paint 2nd colour. Caution using 3 coats of paint of the 2nd colour because you may end up peeling that paint off rather than just the tape line.
@@joshuahawrylak6819 On the tubes it plainly says CAULK, not caulking. That's like calling paint inside a tin ,painting instead of paint. I don't care what country you're in buster.
@@monkeyface6139 I could say we're both right, or you can call the grammer police on me. Just trying to help out with some trade experites. Either way, great that you focused on the main point of my comments.
@@terrismith9095 The only dumb thing here is you Terri, you ever tried to pack mud into 20 holes like that with a knife? It would be way easier, stronger & faster being able to just squeeze it into the hole. If you do it with a knife the plaster won’t reach back to the lathe, which it would if you use the bag.Go watch some more UA-cam and tell yourself that you’re a trades. I worked as a maintenance tech. in a retirement home for 3 years, and I would’ve loved to think of putting mud in a bag to fix all the holes from the residents families hanging 50 pictures on the plaster walls. But yeah keep up the super cool lifestyle of trying to bring others down.
@@aestheticnutz maintenance tech wow that’s dope. Professional painter here. All of this stuff is homeowner level and I guess it works if you just, can’t do it right or something. But not one single tip in this video is even remotely close to productive on anything beyond painting your own kitchen at your own pace. These are all terrible ideas and techniques. You’re gonna have a house forever, just learn how to do it right in the first place, don’t buy cheap equipment or material, don’t stick friggen scotch tape on your brush to make lines, don’t have a brush that’s so garbage that it pours paint on you when you’re using it in a ceiling, that should only happen with oil based products, this whole video is a compilation of terrible ways to waste time and energy. Things last much longer when done properly, a home is a pretty big investment, it’s worth being able to paint right on a small scale.
A good painter once taught me a valuable lesson when it came to painting around door handles… DONT! Just remove them.. it takes like 2 minutes to remove the handles lol
@@laau73 Exactly, I mean even if you know how to cut-in properly you can still paint around a door handle faster and cleaner than using this time wasting technique
I was just thinking that. If you can take the handle off to wipe it just paint the door without it. Also there are caulking guns for holes saving the need for countless plastic bag waste. Painters tape exists already for straight lines and you can always use a smaller brush for finer work instead of bending bristles on larger brushes to tape together. I don’t know what he was doing with the roller either. Just buy a not shit roller.
Me gusta mucho gracias por compartir sus consejos son muy buenos felicitaciones y interesantes en mi bienestar para pintar mis proyectos favoritos felicitaciones
@@derekgleeson1353 If you really want to quit your job just to learn how to paint. You could watch some UA-cam videos to learn... you know, like how you're watching this video without quitting your job.
With the vaseline, I've heard this one before, but how long does it last between installation and painting? If it's undisturbed, will it stay until game day? Or is it a same day next day sort of deal? As for number 7, just use your 5-in-1 or painter's tool or whatever you call it; most versatile hand-tool on earth: look it up.
Frog tape is rubbish, Prodec advance is much better. Also I'm not sure about the silicone trick, paint will not stick to normal silicone, only low modulus.
@@Patrick-n3z4k Even then on texture surface. Even with sealed frog tape you still get leaked. CLEAN LINES. THE MY BATTLE CRY. CLEAN LINE. Never fails. Thank God for thumbs. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Well yea if your doing textured surfaces I guess it makes sense but on a fat wall like they did on the video there is not point as long as you take a putty knife and flatten the edges of the tape
I was beginning to think this a cooking show, so many techniques crossing over. Great tips, will be painting house soon using your ideas . . . unless your available?
Don't watch this bloke although it seems clever he's not, for instance, all brand new roller sleeves have fluff, so if you attach the sleeve to the frame and take it outside and wash it with clean water then run it down a clean surface to spin the excess water out you get almost all of the excess fluff from the manufacturing process out and you have primed the sleeve ready for paint. Alternately if you have a garden hose hold the roller in a fashion that makes the roller spin from the water jet, the centrifugal force along with the water cleans the sleeve. And yes if you are using water based paints trace amounts of water in a brand new roller sleeve is highly desirable before your first dip. Not soaking wet just not quite dry.
Yeah on the first one , its probably paintable latex/ acrylic calk! And you have to watch how thick it is on the edge of the tape, so i just use some very fine sand paper and sand just the edge of the tape, ( Blue / pruple ) and if you dry brush the first coat it seals the edge without the calk step .
Just use regular blue tape, paint a thin coat of the same color paint under the tape, let dry, then paint your other color over it. You accomplish the same thing but your using same color paint that's underneath to seal the tape. If there was any bleed through, it's the same color as the paint underneath the tape.
To all of you people. I'm so sorry but most of this tips are rubbish! I don't know where to start.... SILICONE - is not paintable. For this trick with masking tape you have to use decorators coulk. If you want more i can give you more examples.
Yes they make paintable silicone. Every Big box store carries it and it'll say it on the tube. That's nothing new but using silicone as suggested in this video is a hack job.
@@michaelmcgee2026 No, paint does not adhere to a silicone sealant. To achieve an interior paintable sealant joint, it is important to use a good quality acrylic sealant. When using Painters Flexible Caulk you can effectively fill and seal window frames and sills, door frames, skirting boards and architraves. The sealant joint can then be easily painted over once cured. Alternatively, you can also use a hybrid polymer sealant such as Fix ALL Flexi. Perfect when higher flexibility is required, or for applications areas prone to high humidity - bathrooms and kitchens. You can paint over this product with most paints.
@@sallymay3643 unless you are going for quality, you obviously don’t have standards. I may be able to finish a clients home in a handful of hours but I bet it would look like shit
@@snake5320 For a non handyman, this is gold. Most of the painters, carpenter's etc around my area rip you off for simple jobs. I could do away with simpler jobs.
I don't use painters tape at all.. I can cut in without it.. If you use painters tape, it takes a lot longer and sometimes when you take the tape off, some of the paint comes off also..
GENIUSNESS, AT ITS' FINEST. Thank-you, the MAKER ! YOU MAKE OUR DAY ! Another item: use that green drywall tape, for paint can rims. Two pieces, about 8 inches long, taped over the can edges; the two strips, on overlapping the other, covering about half the diameter of can. PINCH the overlapped edges, together, and this is the drip spout, when pouring paint into a paint tray, etc. TAKE CARE, ALL ! WORK SAFE ! and l o g i c a l l y. ~ : ) !
Llevo 20 años en el oficio del pintor industrial y el único métodos que me gusta es del la cinta y la silicona y para que el rodillo no suelte pelo lo mejor es la lavarlo y darle muchas vueltas para que suelte el exceso de agua.un saludo desde españa
NEVER put vasaline on door furniture. TAKE ALL THE DOOR FURNITURE OFF. Perfect result when you replace it all, and it only takes seconds. Another hot tip - clean the door furniture carefully before replacing, and if the screws are a bit tarnished, replace with all new screws. Small detail - but the effect is that u end up with a door that looks like new.
I worked in a paint roller factory. All the defective paint rollers are sent to the buck store. But to remove lint, we put them in a clothes dryer. Compressed air might work. The plant was overall dirty. So there will always be foreign contaminants in the products.
caulk or caulking, I see other issues with that first tip. 1, "silicone" ?? Unless you get the right stuff, it repels paint and you would never be able to paint over that stripe job again. 2. Smearing stuff along your paint line is going to change the texture/sheen of the paint underneath and most likely leave a fine line along the edge where you smear--so you might have clean stripes, but that smear job is going to show up. 3. If you are striping a whole room, or even a wall, it would be a lot quicker--and easier on your fingers to just over paint the tape with the under coat.
Been a painter for 25 years ,all my cutting in is free hand ,I never user silicone unless its for around a bath or a sink ( because its not paintable ) ,its a nightmare when silicone man has put this this stuff everywhere ,it needs to come off and replaced with paintable caulk ,all floors are sealed with plastic dust sheets masked up then cotton dust sheets ,this stops any paint touching the floor and you can make as much mess as you want until the job is complete.
Never compromise on your standards ,its what makes you good at what you do ,good luck and happy brush monkeying
They do make paintable silicone. I used some last week.
To make this even easier. Put the tape down first. Paint the tape the same color as the wall, let dry, paint the real color! No Bleed Through!
I didn’t paint before this video but the algorithm got me and after watching… I all of a sudden got inspired to try these tricks 🤔 level 100 master in the making, thank you 🙂
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This tutorial video proves that Subject is never boring, it's the teacher who can make it either boring or incredibly existing just like this video.
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I’m a painter and these aren’t tips. Don’t do any of this crap. I can’t stress this enough.
I've been a painter for 14 year's and the brush dripping paint is a easy solution that requires nothing more than properly regularly pushing excess paint off your brush from the top of the bucket from all four sides of the brush everytime you dunk your brush into the paint.
True or just rolling the edge of the roller at an angle on the wall then going over it
Exactly
I love it 👍🏼 giving Tips like that gives us real painters more clients where we fix the shit they do because of you. Thanks bro 👌🏼🥳
I was cringing watching this video. I feel bad for the people in the comments that think these are great tips.
@@88clemoine by
Yep, totally agree.
I feel like most of these problems can be fixed by using the correct masking tape and washing your rollers before you use them. Am I wrong?
@@MrAdomus Yeah, we professional painters rarely use masking tape to cut in and make straight lines. We rely on our steady hand and masking tape is used for things like keeping overspray off of clear coated woodwork when rolling walls.
Most of these tricks are only needed if you don't know what your doing and you are doing small home repairs or if you are buying cheap tools.
The spackling tip is just not a good way to fill holes. On a real job you are going to have hundreds if not thousands of screw indents on the sheetrock and filling that tin bag is just not going to cut it. It's why we have tools to spackle with and 50 - 80 pound buckets of spackle to carry around. Its a nice trick if you have no tools though.
The tape and the roller are just problems of cheaping out on tools. Good rollers sleeves don't leave stuff on the wall. In fact this roller sleeve in this video is either horrible or not supposed to be used for that type of application. The tape in this video is just cheap blue tape. I've always used frog tape and I don't jave to spend extra time going around all the edges of the tape. Just spend the extra dollar or two on the frog tape and you won't ever need to do this.
As for the cutting in of a faucet. If you have the faucet off you will never even need to cut in in the first place. I also don't know who is painting their counter tops now a day or ever but he I guess it's a neat trick.
Then their is the cutting in trick. I just gotta say that this trick is just the worst of them all. If you are doing cuts on anything you should be using an angled brush. No professional painter is going to take the time to tape a brush and basically ruin that brush for all other applications over just buying a angled brush.
These tip are not going to make you a good painter. Sorry to the video creator but these tip are trash.
Not going to lie....You took the words right out of my mouth.....Not to mention the tape is almost never used by real painters. Everything is free hand cutting in, and or they have Actual cut in tools, But when i see someone using Masking tape I know immediately they are NOT professional unless its for hinges and widows. The Roller sleeve he had was 3 dollars and NOONE will take the time to put lubricant on something...Just carry a damp cloth with you and clean your mess right away and re cut. LOL this video was good for a laugh however.
Agree with Kyle and ChroneSRT here. The most cringey for me was the vaseline. I'd like to see how they wipe that stuff off fixtures without getting any smear on the freshly painted wall. just take the fixtures off before you paint.
Indeed, every single tip or trick would get you laughed off a jobsite...and those brushes and rollers naps and even the handles were the cheapest of the cheap. this guy has ZERO clue of how to paint, he cost himself a lot of wasted time and effort mainly because of that!...absolutely unbelievable, no painter with half a brain would use that manila tape to mask off with
Ya don't need to mix up spackle no one does this except guys who are already mudding...simple shrink free will do the job of nail and screw holes
Angled brush- Sash tool or sash brush
The plaster in the bag is for quickset and fixing holes and repairs. He didn't use a garbage bag. After using a hawk, and making a mess doing repairs to nail pops (done by a so called professional) I like it. Who cares what you pro's think.
Yeah agree those tricks are dumb.
As someone who does not paint for a living, these tips were really helpful for me. Thank you so much for sharing them.
I have made all of those mistakes you illustrated!
Really though
I have been a painter for 36 yrs and I am the President of my painting corp, all the tricks are tricks of the trade.
@perfectpainter9140 Humans are suckers for hacks and tips. We can’t help ourselves.
Some of the other professional painters have said the exact opposite of what you said in these comments. Painting is more patience and sensibility than technique. I painted my parents’ bedroom as a surprise while they were on a cruise. I washed the walls with Tri-sodium phosphate, and rinsed them off. I missed a spot on the ceiling in terms of not enough coverage, but other than that, it was a good paint job. It was my first time painting a room in my entire life. I knew that I had to prep the walls by cleaning them so that the paint would properly adhere.
My sister just had several rooms in her house painted by a young woman who paints interiors professionally. She did a stellar job. She probably used NONE of these so-called tips.
It’s lack of knowledge that leads people to seek hacks and fake “tips.” The best way to learn is to do your own projects and learn from there. The trouble is, that most people are too afraid to do big home projects. That is why they pay people big money for services that anyone can learn if they would only take the time.
If you took a child between eight and ten years old, and taught him or her how to do big house projects, with accurate, step-by-step information, that child would likely be ready to earn excellent money by the time they graduated from junior high school.
Sure ... but the average person doesn't know them.
President 😂
@@christopherwarner6590
What’s funnie Mr Warner
Viva El Presidenté 😆
1st Tip: A good tape like Frog Tape solves this problem and the adhesion gets better after a couple hours.
2nd Tip: A bowl works wonders, or buy premixed if you're lazy. Also, cheap baggies split at the seams if you try that.
3rd Tip: Only cheap covers do this. If that's what you must have, roll it mostly dry in whatever tray you're using. If it has lint that bad, it will also likely start shedding more after a few hours' use or after a washing.
4th Tip: Legit, especially for painting things that are hard to take out of the wall/ceiling such as freakin doorbell speakers.
5th Tip: Do not do this. The lid might keep paint off, but the brush will be ruined faster. Hold it at a shallow angle and do your best to keep only the end wet. For such a large surface used in this example, a mini roller is more cost effective, especially if you're just painting your house. Also, you're holding it wrong.
6th Tip: Weird, but okay. If its a water base, and you can wash it in running water, just use your hand. Wear a latex glove if you're squeamish. Besides, your hack probably wears out the cover faster, not to mention you massacred a poor mini roller.
7th Tip: DO NOT DO THIS. Unless its a two dollar brush, that little trick will ruin the brush quick. No matter what you do, brushes draw paint up into their bases. There's lots of things you can do reduce this, but the sooner this happens, the sooner you're going to need a new brush.
I was essentially gonna do the same thing, you saved me some typing.
Excellent point about the painters tape Jinseta, waiting several hours for the tape to achieve its full adhesion at room temperature, just as leaving painters tape on too long (over 24 hours) makes it almost impossible to use without scraping.
mix your mud in a pan. ready mix is not lazy. if you regularly skim with hot mud, you're probably an idiot. learn about your mud people
hater
18 years working in drywall and I learn something new everyday...thanks
Been painting all my life. Pushing 60.
Liked the bagged mud trick myself. No clean up. Cheers
Haha
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No
Mantap....trik yg handal, ilmu yg sungguh bermanfaat
The vaseline application is so useful! I always get get frustrated about paint getting into places that are too small or too awkward to tape off. Thanks for posting!
how u like to put vaseline properly on that area with don't touch painting surface?
@@sakul899 you put the vaseline on before you paint then clean it off after the paint has dried. I think this would only work with acrylics and water colors because they are water-based and won't mix with the oily vaseline, but I could be wrong. Using painter's tape is probably a better option than vaseline, but tape can sometimes tear the surface you're lifting it from and can leave behind residue. Painter's tape isn't supposed to do this, but I've had it happen before (probably was a cheap brand).
There's something called masking fluid that you can get, but imo it's difficult to work with (it's kind of like glue). And, it destroys a paint brush, so you have to use a cheap brush that you don't care about. You're supposed to just peel it off after the paint dries, but it didn't come off very easily for me when I tried it. I felt like I totally wanted my money on it.
If you're going to remove the fixture or cover to apply Vaseline to it such that you do not get any Vaseline on the wall surface before painting, why not simply paint the surface while the fixture or cover is removed and then reinstall the fixture or cover after the paint has been applied 😎
@@GravityRoller I think the tip is for people who do not want to remove the fixture first...ie if they are in a hurry and need to paint an area for a quick repair.
@@scootermom1791 Help me to understand your comment, by enlightening me as to how you go about applying 100% coverage of Vaseline to the fixture without getting ANY on the substrate ...? Hmmm ...,
I clicked cause of the thumb but really got into it. A bit of cake boss into the plaster arena...we'll done. I can't believe a vid that actually has simple solutions that looks like it would work. Brilliant.
Great tips. Always open to making a job easier. Keep up the good work.
I wish i would have watched this before my renovations!!!! so amazing.
I could watch your tips forever! Thank you!❤❤❤
Then when will you get the work done 😂
7 very good and useful painting tips, thank you
For the caulk and tape for clean lines that can work, or you can use the original wall colour so the blue for this instance over the tape first, creates the seal, then apply your chosen color, I do this for down pipes, for quicker drying times and no build up of caulk. The caulk is good when painting clean lines to timber framings. I’ve done this for years.
If they bend the bristles a bit then most of these hacks wouldn't be needed. Long time painter here also. 😂🤣😂
Only works your way if you still have the wall color. You never still have a can of original wall color. If most of my clients did my life would be way easier.
@@myradioon haha If only! Or they say I’ve got the colour but it’s been sitting there since dawn of time and it’s as hard as concrete!! 😂 color matching is a last resort. But I hear ya!
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This person's work is wonderful. You are a person who understands art. Thank you
Thongs change scent from one end to the other. Knowledge is power. God bless
I am a professional painter, with 30 plus years, in the business. While these are all very nice tricks, they are not applicable in professional painting. They are geared towards the home owner that likes to do their own projects. ✌🏼❤️🌱
َََ
Wow what a useful video
I was always able to paint straight linesin house painting because I spent 20 years as a billboard sign painter doing letters. Pretty cool tips here though.The quality of the tools (brushes you use is very important.
You've learned over many years to control you hand tremors, predict paint direction on textures surfaces, and pushing the paint on your brush. Most people see your work thinking it's easy, but blame everything under the sun when their work doesn't come out like yours! I'm not quite at your level, but I'm getting there!
ua-cam.com/users/shortsrHcbqPxstMA?feature=share
LOL NO WAY YOU PAINTED SIGNS AND APPROVED OF THE NONSENSE HERE LET ALONE THE CRAP BRUSHES AND ROLLERS THIS GUY WAS USING...NICE TRY THOUGH
@@nasticanasta that’s my thought. Garbage products get garbage results. Usually. I’m not saying you can’t use cheaper products but come on man. That roller looked more like it came right off the sheeps back with 3/4 knapp And I’ve seen brushes like that in a 5 pac for $1 and the dollar store. Let’s be real. Your not putting icing on a cake. That was a lot more effort than I have ever seen for filling a hole But. Then again if you want to use garbage. Please just enjoy this man video. It may just help help you.. I mean you’ll. Only have $3.00 invested lol
@@nasticanasta I didn’t say I approved of the tools they used here; clearly it was shit.(You should never buy a roller cover that you have to run tape over it to remove the shit falling off of it. I never really needed tape to create straight lines that looked good; because of my years of sign painting.But I can see the use in some of the things in the video to help out if you don’t know what you’re doing.
Your ideas are simple and easy
Anyone at home can do it
To use Vaseline around the door handle you’ve essentially got to cut in the Vaseline otherwise the paint won’t stick to the wall so if your willing to cut in maybe just cut in the paint. Or remove the handle lol
The hand gestures are too "expressive cute"! 🙌👌👍
I am a painter & varnisher by profession. I did a 3 year apprenticeship and have been doing the job for over 20 years. Many things from the video are explained incorrectly.
1. The Tape edge is painted with the same color as the background and painted with any color after drying. There you have straight lines. Definitely not with silicone.
2. New tool, wash with warm water before use.
3.Door handles are removed before painting instead of treating them with Vaseline.
The video gives me the crisis. Greetings from Germany.
Im working evryday with that tools and now ill become even more great, thanks
Hey Maker. Great tips. Thanks for sharing.🍁🍁👍👍
Brilliant my friend, as I’m decorating this weekend 🙏🏻🙏🏻
Great tips 👌🔥
Thank You 👍
মোৰ ভিডিঅ চাবা 🙏
You have a good idea. There are useful little things that few people know about.Thanks for your sharing
No are these fake accounts
So far watched 3 videos and as a professional contractor with 20 years in the business I would say don't follow any advice from these.
Your just mad you didn't come up with anything. Dumbass
@MR.BuDgEeZ I didn't need to come up with anything. There is a right way to do things and this video does not show them.
What? Did you even watch the video? These are just helpful tricks for getting lint off rollers and Masking and stuff. There's nothing technique related about them.
@beantea5592 if you know how to paint these tips are useless. Vaseline will contaminate your brush and paint, taping a roller will just compromise its integrity, and you would never use a thick roller like that on interior walls and applying silicone to tape will render all areas with it unpaintable because paint will flake off
@jonam4038 that's probobly why he applied the Vaseline to a metal fixture that's never going to be painted. You can remove Vaseline from brushes with mineral sprits. The purpose of showing the roller was only to demonstrate how to remove lint and there's no way tape is going to compromise the integrity of it unless you're using duct tape or something absurd like that.
I work on a ship, a lot of painting maintenance, already learned a couple of it through experience trial and errors, but i wished i watched this video long ago.
For the first video, don't use caulking. Simply paint the line back with the first colour.
Allow the blue to bleed though (thus giving you blue on blue). When dry (and therefore has sealed the gaps), paint 2nd colour.
Caution using 3 coats of paint of the 2nd colour because you may end up peeling that paint off rather than just the tape line.
It's not called caulking
@@monkeyface6139 it's called caulking in this country. But the point is don't use any filler, just the first colour of paint.
@@joshuahawrylak6819
Nah that's not right, the video didn't say that.
@@joshuahawrylak6819
On the tubes it plainly says CAULK, not caulking. That's like calling paint inside a tin ,painting instead of paint.
I don't care what country you're in buster.
@@monkeyface6139 I could say we're both right, or you can call the grammer police on me.
Just trying to help out with some trade experites.
Either way, great that you focused on the main point of my comments.
Good Content & An Excellent sharing , keep it up
Hola buen día. Gracias por compartir estos trucos
ua-cam.com/users/shortsE6AasmDMQKA?feature=shares
Excelente....Eso es trabajar con metodologia....Saltando la rutina y buscando nuevos caminos neuronales Exito...
This video deserves way more likes 👍🏻 I really like the plaster in the bag trick, can’t believe I’ve never thought of that!
@@terrismith9095 The only dumb thing here is you Terri, you ever tried to pack mud into 20 holes like that with a knife? It would be way easier, stronger & faster being able to just squeeze it into the hole. If you do it with a knife the plaster won’t reach back to the lathe, which it would if you use the bag.Go watch some more UA-cam and tell yourself that you’re a trades. I worked as a maintenance tech. in a retirement home for 3 years, and I would’ve loved to think of putting mud in a bag to fix all the holes from the residents families hanging 50 pictures on the plaster walls. But yeah keep up the super cool lifestyle of trying to bring others down.
@@aestheticnutz The problem is, these people think drywall and plaster are the same thing and can be fixed using the same products.
@@aestheticnutz maintenance tech wow that’s dope. Professional painter here. All of this stuff is homeowner level and I guess it works if you just, can’t do it right or something. But not one single tip in this video is even remotely close to productive on anything beyond painting your own kitchen at your own pace. These are all terrible ideas and techniques. You’re gonna have a house forever, just learn how to do it right in the first place, don’t buy cheap equipment or material, don’t stick friggen scotch tape on your brush to make lines, don’t have a brush that’s so garbage that it pours paint on you when you’re using it in a ceiling, that should only happen with oil based products, this whole video is a compilation of terrible ways to waste time and energy. Things last much longer when done properly, a home is a pretty big investment, it’s worth being able to paint right on a small scale.
@@jc199159 Kewl
A good painter once taught me a valuable lesson when it came to painting around door handles… DONT! Just remove them.. it takes like 2 minutes to remove the handles lol
Yes! He's lifting it off the door to wipe it so just take it off . 4 screws for basic doors . Way easier the vaseline and cleaning
@@laau73 Exactly, I mean even if you know how to cut-in properly you can still paint around a door handle faster and cleaner than using this time wasting technique
I always do. It is quicker to remove, than to fiddle around them and wipe em off!
I was just thinking that. If you can take the handle off to wipe it just paint the door without it. Also there are caulking guns for holes saving the need for countless plastic bag waste. Painters tape exists already for straight lines and you can always use a smaller brush for finer work instead of bending bristles on larger brushes to tape together. I don’t know what he was doing with the roller either. Just buy a not shit roller.
Jus did that yesterday.... 😂
Me gusta mucho gracias por compartir sus consejos son muy buenos felicitaciones y interesantes en mi bienestar para pintar mis proyectos favoritos felicitaciones
Most of these “tricks” are easily avoidable using one simple trick… learning to paint properly.
Well I'll quit my job and do that.
@@derekgleeson1353 If you really want to quit your job just to learn how to paint. You could watch some UA-cam videos to learn... you know, like how you're watching this video without quitting your job.
Some people aren't experts at everything. I enjoyed the video.
Amen. Been painting 17 years in the film industry and I gotta say this is all garbage.
@@Bevity Or just follow these tricks skip and don't learn
درود واقعا ایده های کاربردی رو اموزش دادید و جای یک لایک محکم رو داره .موفق وپیروز باشید👍
With the vaseline, I've heard this one before, but how long does it last between installation and painting? If it's undisturbed, will it stay until game day? Or is it a same day next day sort of deal? As for number 7, just use your 5-in-1 or painter's tool or whatever you call it; most versatile hand-tool on earth: look it up.
Excellent tips! Worth the watch. Thx
There is a tool u can buy for most of this stuff now, like frog tape. Please do not use grease on any surfaces before paint unless u want a mess
Good advice .The thing with the grease & the handle was the most pointless move I've ever seen
Frog tape is rubbish, Prodec advance is much better. Also I'm not sure about the silicone trick, paint will not stick to normal silicone, only low modulus.
Genau das hat mir noch gefehlt.DANKE 😅
Very clever & useful😃
I always use caulking in a tape seam. Especially ceiling to wall trim to wall. And baseboards. Nice tricks.
Bro they make tape that does this its called frog tape and their are multiple different strengths of it
@@Patrick-n3z4k Even then on texture surface. Even with sealed frog tape you still get leaked. CLEAN LINES. THE MY BATTLE CRY. CLEAN LINE. Never fails. Thank God for thumbs. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Well yea if your doing textured surfaces I guess it makes sense but on a fat wall like they did on the video there is not point as long as you take a putty knife and flatten the edges of the tape
Muito bom! Ganhou mais um amigo!
I was beginning to think this a cooking show, so many techniques crossing over. Great tips, will be painting house soon using your ideas . . . unless your available?
Muito criativo 😁
Obrigada pelas dicas 😌
Hello
Thanks from Naples FL🍊🇺🇸✌️
Gracias por sus consejos :-)
7.5 million views in 8 days wt no intro no bs , js straight up. Wow ! Curious bout ths channel now before I subscribe
Excelentes torques!
Obrigada.
7 perfect tricks, worth learning from you
Subbed, now I'm binge watching. Such simple yet smart fixes! Thank you!
Don't watch this bloke although it seems clever he's not, for instance, all brand new roller sleeves have fluff, so if you attach the sleeve to the frame and take it outside and wash it with clean water then run it down a clean surface to spin the excess water out you get almost all of the excess fluff from the manufacturing process out and you have primed the sleeve ready for paint. Alternately if you have a garden hose hold the roller in a fashion that makes the roller spin from the water jet, the centrifugal force along with the water cleans the sleeve.
And yes if you are using water based paints trace amounts of water in a brand new roller sleeve is highly desirable before your first dip. Not soaking wet just not quite dry.
@@daveredd9832 😲
The best trick I've seen! Love it
Muito boas dicas! Parabéns.
This video is a masterpiece. You nailed it!
Wouldn't silicone remain on the wall under the paint for first one, making it raised
Yes and if it dries which most the time it dose. The caulking peels up as well taking the paint with it. Just buy the right tape🤷♂️
Yeah on the first one , its probably paintable latex/ acrylic calk! And you have to watch how thick it is on the edge of the tape, so i just use some very fine sand paper and sand just the edge of the tape, ( Blue / pruple ) and if you dry brush the first coat it seals the edge without the calk step .
it’s great to be someone who thinks about the outcome before work
Just use regular blue tape, paint a thin coat of the same color paint under the tape, let dry, then paint your other color over it. You accomplish the same thing but your using same color paint that's underneath to seal the tape. If there was any bleed through, it's the same color as the paint underneath the tape.
I give this video a Thumbs up.
Super obrigada 🤩
awesome tricks... big love from indonesia ☕️👍
Ótimas dicas
@marian koniuszko dumb & dumber.. from a pro
essas não são ótimas dicas. isso é coisa estúpida que os donos de casa inventam. Nenhum profissional faria essas coisas.
Thank you Obdaddy! I owned a 5 in 1, love it! I agree with your entire comment. Just leave it to professionals!
This person's work is wonderful. You are a person who understands art. Thank you
Very useful, and helpful. Thank you!
Not
Great ideas I never new before thank you
ua-cam.com/video/xiNAdtaZ9AA/v-deo.html
Adoro seus vídeos!!🤩🙋♀️😎
The
Thanks for sharing your knowledge. Useful tricks.
To all of you people. I'm so sorry but most of this tips are rubbish!
I don't know where to start....
SILICONE - is not paintable. For this trick with masking tape you have to use decorators coulk.
If you want more i can give you more examples.
Yes they make paintable silicone. Every Big box store carries it and it'll say it on the tube. That's nothing new but using silicone as suggested in this video is a hack job.
@@michaelmcgee2026 No, paint does not adhere to a silicone sealant.
To achieve an interior paintable sealant joint, it is important to use a good quality acrylic sealant. When using Painters Flexible Caulk you can effectively fill and seal window frames and sills, door frames, skirting boards and architraves. The sealant joint can then be easily painted over once cured.
Alternatively, you can also use a hybrid polymer sealant such as Fix ALL Flexi. Perfect when higher flexibility is required, or for applications areas prone to high humidity - bathrooms and kitchens. You can paint over this product with most paints.
Very interesting and creative ways
Some of these tips are just avoiding learning a skill or how to use a tool properly. Not progress.
There is no1 way 2 use tools. We use them 2 get the job done 1 way or another if it works use it. ✌🪶
@@sallymay3643 unless you are going for quality, you obviously don’t have standards. I may be able to finish a clients home in a handful of hours but I bet it would look like shit
@@snake5320 For a non handyman, this is gold. Most of the painters, carpenter's etc around my area rip you off for simple jobs. I could do away with simpler jobs.
I don't use painters tape at all.. I can cut in without it.. If you use painters tape, it takes a lot longer and sometimes when you take the tape off, some of the paint comes off also..
Exactly
Хорошие способы. Нам понравилось. Лайк конечно!)
Very gooooood...
Very good panting wark👍
GENIUSNESS, AT ITS' FINEST. Thank-you, the MAKER ! YOU MAKE OUR DAY ! Another item: use that green drywall tape, for paint can rims. Two pieces, about 8 inches long, taped over the can edges; the two strips, on overlapping the other, covering about half the diameter of can. PINCH the overlapped edges, together, and this is the drip spout, when pouring paint into a paint tray, etc. TAKE CARE, ALL ! WORK SAFE ! and l o g i c a l l y. ~ : ) !
thank you so much for not putting annoying music🙏❤❤
The Vaseline hint is a good one... 👍👍
Llevo 20 años en el oficio del pintor industrial y el único métodos que me gusta es del la cinta y la silicona y para que el rodillo no suelte pelo lo mejor es la lavarlo y darle muchas vueltas para que suelte el exceso de agua.un saludo desde españa
Great review, thanks for posting!
Very clever and usefull tips, many thanks for your work
NEVER put vasaline on door furniture. TAKE ALL THE DOOR FURNITURE OFF. Perfect result when you replace it all, and it only takes seconds. Another hot tip - clean the door furniture carefully before replacing, and if the screws are a bit tarnished, replace with all new screws. Small detail - but the effect is that u end up with a door that looks like new.
EXCELENTES IDEAS. MIS FELICITACIONES.-
FANTASTIC. THANKS SO MUCH!!
Thank you for sharing how
I gave you a thumbs up 👍 teehee. Thanks so much for the great tips!
Thank you for the Great tips.
Amazing good job
Salut, belle vidéo. Et ce que j'aime part dessus tout c'est qu'il n'y a pas de music, comme ça fait du bien bravo !!!
Good work
First tip...."apply silicone on paper tape for clean lines" should also be labelled "render that wall un-paintable for ever after".
I worked in a paint roller factory. All the defective paint rollers are sent to the buck store. But to remove lint, we put them in a clothes dryer. Compressed air might work. The plant was overall dirty. So there will always be foreign contaminants in the products.
Nice tips .. Godbless
nice video painting designers
caulk or caulking, I see other issues with that first tip. 1, "silicone" ?? Unless you get the right stuff, it repels paint and you would never be able to paint over that stripe job again. 2. Smearing stuff along your paint line is going to change the texture/sheen of the paint underneath and most likely leave a fine line along the edge where you smear--so you might have clean stripes, but that smear job is going to show up. 3. If you are striping a whole room, or even a wall, it would be a lot quicker--and easier on your fingers to just over paint the tape with the under coat.
Херня это всё, и больше заморочек
THANK YOU! AMAZING.. ❤️🇷🇸❤️
Wish a painter would show up for work with these tool.😯.and use them 😳😁..I can honestly say it would make my day🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂😢😢😢🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂😯🤣🤣
Genius tips well done and thanks for sharing :)
This person's work is wonderful. You are a person who understands art. Thank you
Pas mal les astuces ! 👍
Someone has been watching the pastry chefs 😂 excellent 👌🏼
Ola amigo buenísimo tu consejo grasia cuidate saludo amigos soy Gerardo Salta Argentina 🇦🇷❤👍soy pintor oficial me vino vien