You don't need masking tape at all. unless you're spraying it. A brush and a steady hand is all you need. I've trimmed in many homes with no masking tape at all. Give it a try.
I like that idea makes it nice enough to sell and the next owners can either leave it as is or it provides a nice clean slate for whatever kind of flooring the new owners choose to put down
Excellent work. Your attention to detail is amazing and it shows in the finished product. Take care and I look forward to more of your wilderness and renovation adventures.
Your method for applying painter’s tape gives me hope that I can do the same. I have never before seen someone paint a floor with a brush! You are truly an awesome man. Post, you make everything you tackle look easy. Thanks, bud.
Time to make that room the worst social media livestreaming/video making room of all time, @@ganon01ryanoutsen92. Ear-rape everyone who dare listens to your videos. lol
@@mollycrime have you never watched any of these home flipping programs on TV? A lot of those homes are complete disasters and you wonder why anybody would buy them after they see what they looked like before they were improved. So cut mr. Post 10 some slack.
Nice job sir. I use Rust-Oleum (Zinsser) B I N shellac based primer. It seals any water, smoke or fire damage. It gives a nice finish and needs less top coats. (Less work for you)
You could get a few boxes of peel-and-stick vinyl tiles from the hardware store, they're dirt cheap, somewhat flexible, durable, and easy to cut to size. It'd be a nice cheap way to make the room look more finished and it'd prolly adhere to your painted plywood well.
Thank you for the idea of peel and stick vinyl tiles, as I was just thinking how am I going to walk over the floor during the month that it is curing that it is curing that the paint is curing
Came out nice. I’ve been a scenic artist and painter for 35 years. The wall paint was probably ok provided a 1/2"-3/4" lamb skin roller sleeve is used. Try one. They’re a bit more expensive but they don’t spatter, apply better coverage and clean easily with water. Worth the investment as a painter. I have some 1.5" ones I’ve used for 5-10 years.
I bought an old rental house that had terrible pee stained carpet. I found that painted floors with area rugs worked great. At the time I did it for economic reasons, but I really liked the look. Another option is the two-part epoxy floor paint they designed for garages. Those are more expensive, but the finish is practically bulletproof.
I specialize in flooring, and when I read that title I was like "Oh god, what the hell are they thinking?". Surprisingly nice outcome though. Not my favorite cheap flooring solution (Personally I usually spring for LVP), but this looks like it will work in a pinch.
@@micah_lee It's not too bad if you're selling the place, since the floor being painted doesn't matter if the next owner decides to put down new carpet or something nicer. And it really does help kill the urine smell, though there are some specialty paints that work even better.
Perfect room 👌.. now it just needs a culvert exit to practice speed whirlpools and get the technique a solid 10/10.. I watched the other video where the city folks used your rake, but were unable to weld it to your power. Keep up the amazing job sir! 🧡
It sure turned out shiny and smooth! can a person fill in the spaces between the boards with plastic wood to eliminate the spaces? Can the paint be applied with a roller? thanks for posting this and thanks for your consideration.
The only problem with using painters tape is sometimes when you peel it off you can still get drips and runs and other imperfections that makes it's way under the tape or odd tape lines especially when you're laying it on thick. For a fast cheap job....sure. But if you're working on a higher end house with fancy trim work I recommend hand cutting with no tape. It takes longer and yes sometimes you're not always 100% straight but when the room is finished, unless if you're a pro painter specifically inspecting the work, you're not likely to notice it as long as your getting right up into the edge but not past it. A good cut line requires some practice but here are some tips.... 1. Never over load your brush with too much paint. You really only want to load the bottom 1/4 of your brush. After several reloads if you find that the paint is taking over your brush to much it's time to give it a wash off. A steel brush works great to clean a paint brush when you start getting dried up paint on your bristles. 2. When cutting apply a good amount of pressure so that your bristles bend almost like 45 degree's on the wall and start a few inches below your cut line then drag your brush from left to right getting closer and closer to the edge line (like a car yeiding from a road onto the main highway) and when you hit that line point then level it out and keep that straight edge pressure going for length. Then reload and continue your edge by starting a little before where you left off so that you're merging again onto the cut line. Make sure you brush in a few inches of paint below your cut line too so that your entire cutting in line is a good 4 inches wide. You have to remember that when you go to use the roller that the roller itself can only reach so far before it hits the ceiling and you don't want that to happen. So the wider your cut line the more you'll lessen your chances of tapping the ceiling with your roller when you roll your walls. 3. Sometimes you can cut in the room twice before you add your first coat of paint. If you're lucky to get a nice one coat coverage because you went with a better paint and a good 3/4 thick roller nap then you can avoid that 2nd cut in problem because if you can still see the brush strokes on your cut line then you have to recut the room over your first rolled coat but when you do that you'll see a texture difference over the edge of where you rolled. Usually you want to roll OVER your cut. . . not CUT OVER your roll. 4. Have a cheap plastic painters pail to reload your brush instead of using the paint pan. looks like a kids sand bucket toy. You can hold it in your hand while you do your brushing instead of running up and down the ladder all the time to redip in the paint can or pan. This saves you from having your paint dry up. You can soak a rag and drape it over your pail to keep your paint wet while you break for a bit. This is also why you shouldn't over fill your paint pan like post10 did in this video. You need the ramp to squeeze off the excess but not too much. And if that paint sits too long in the pan small little flakes start to harden and form in it and they transfer to the wall when you roll. When it dries those flakes fall right off leaving behind open spots of bare wall. This is also important to keep your roller wet. Wrap it in plastic if you have to but make sure when you're done for the day that you clean it out really well. avoid those paint chips
Yes it will. Use 3/4” or 1” nap roller cover. And: you could have trimmed that switch plate better so it butted against the trim. No need for that hard edge and that gap.
Yeah a thick nap roller would have been way way faster and the paint would have been thicker. It would ooze into cracks and make it look better and smoother. I painted my 1000 sqft basement with a roller. It looked amazing.
Reminds me of my house. I bought a cheap house to reno it and removed all the carpet. Pulling up every staple took ages lol. I found gloves invaluable when dealing with the tack board though. That stuff is really pointy!
Caulk in the cracks and touch them up with paint and it will be 1000 times nicer looking. Make sure to run a wet rag over the caulk to remove the excess before painting it.
Turned out better than I expected. But gotta be careful with your paint roller technique. It’s better to work the entire wall rather than half the wall/small sections. Gonna end up with roller/brush lines when the light hits it’s. Also should have sanded that floor and filled the gaps and holes at least. Again turned out nice all and all!
Do you have other videos that lead us up to the videos of the floor in this room? Like when you acquired this home, I understand now it's a flip house. Can you show us the whole house? I just love all your videos, you are such an awesome young man. Also must add that April is getting so big, she is so lucky to have you.
Painting - use a cheap oil based paint thinned with mineral spirits 10% as a primer coat on the floor - that will seal the wood; then apply your expensive one coat floor paint. Make sure both your primer coat and top coat are the same kind of paint so they create a strong bond.
Hey man you know how to use to remove the staples, I would go and get a roofing shovel used for pulling off shingles off a roof that would be ideal because they already meant for pulling up nails and staples and it is six or more inches across very helpful
So I live in North Carolina and just got an ad for a Detroit pizza place....🧐 I mean it looked awesome and would love to have some of Jetts pizza but I think the logistics might get in the way a bit .... nice job google now I want pizza I’ll never have 😡
I would never have thought to paint subflooring! Brilliant 👏
Nice. The feeling after your done is great. Accomplished and grateful.
Flipping real estate. Cool. One of the many sidelines of Post10. Thanks.
I really like the masking technique. Faster than the way I currently do it (may change after seeing this).
You don't need masking tape at all. unless you're spraying it. A brush and a steady hand is all you need. I've trimmed in many homes with no masking tape at all. Give it a try.
@@VROOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM It is a touch strange that you do not think me imaginative enough to try detail painting without masking tape.
Then you need ore practice I guess?
@@VROOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM Had plenty, thank you.
Tips seem to help a good deal in doing something new. Thank you, room looks so much better.
how is this glorious man so versitile
All men used to have this wide array of skills. Back in the day, you weren't considered a real man unless you did.
Don't know, but I'm glad I had found his videos. He gives me hope.
@@maxkronader5225 women are the same they cook, make me sammiches, clean my clothes, clean my house
@@computershutoff13666
I hope she also cleans the shit from your mouth
@@gocryaboutit3121
Aww a snowflake got triggered. LOL!😁😁😁
I like that idea makes it nice enough to sell and the next owners can either leave it as is or it provides a nice clean slate for whatever kind of flooring the new owners choose to put down
It’s incredibly based
you know the next owners are going to carpet that floor. Wooden floors are COLD in the winter.
@@MikeTheGamer77 hopefully they will do.. thats look like my garage floor
@@MikeTheGamer77they could put a room size carpet on it
Really do love the diverse material you cover. Gives me ideas to do in my own home on a budget. Keep up the good work! 👍
Excellent work. Your attention to detail is amazing and it shows in the finished product. Take care and I look forward to more of your wilderness and renovation adventures.
Your method for applying painter’s tape gives me hope that I can do the same. I have never before seen someone paint a floor with a brush! You are truly an awesome man. Post, you make everything you tackle look easy. Thanks, bud.
Rollers don't get in the cracks and holes like a brush can, more attention to detail
@@post.10 good to know this.
I've just masking taped and painted by bathroom today.
Masking tape took ages to line up right. Oh why didn't you post this earlier?
I was being cheap but frog tape is the best of it needs perfection
Omg I'm super excited beeing in first minutes here, greetings from Ireland 👌 was waiting for progress video on this floor 😊
Oh to be young again and to be able to flip that magic overdrive switch that speeds you up to 3- or 4-times normal. I used to get so much done!
You have your hands in everything, very bright guy, SWEET
That looks so much better. Nice clean start for the next occupants.
It looks really crisp, props to you.
You are so talented.
I love to watch you work.
Love your videos so much.
Gorgeous, as always.
Without the carpet, the room has got a crazy echo.
Yea sounds like a cave
A bed and a dresser and problem solved 😃
Time to make that room the worst social media livestreaming/video making room of all time, @@ganon01ryanoutsen92. Ear-rape everyone who dare listens to your videos. lol
Area rug
i dont know why but i could watch this man do anything and still be entertained.
To Post 10 👍🏼🇺🇸 Absolutely love the renovation of the bedroom 👍🏼🇺🇸 Jennifer from Australia 👍🏼🇦🇺
Redoing a bedroom with very old carpet. Liked the outcome of your work.
Fantastic job, can't wait to see it decorated..! 💯%👍😁
Great job, it looks like a new room. 💚💚
Whoda thunk it?? Post 10 not only takes care of the culverts and drains but, he also does home improvements!! Awesome!!
Hes the new Tim the tool man Taylor 🥇
i wouldn't call it an improvement; it's clearly a "dress up a pig to sell it to a sucker" job
@@mollycrime have you never watched any of these home flipping programs on TV? A lot of those homes are complete disasters and you wonder why anybody would buy them after they see what they looked like before they were improved. So cut mr. Post 10 some slack.
Man this guy is a civil engineer and a diy handy man!! Thats pretty much everything!
When I first saw your thumbnail I wondered what new thing you were doing. That in NO way looks like the old room. You did a great job.
I love your flood videos! Gives good touches!
Nice job sir. I use Rust-Oleum (Zinsser) B I N shellac based primer. It seals any water, smoke or fire damage. It gives a nice finish and needs less top coats. (Less work for you)
250k well done man 🙏
You could get a few boxes of peel-and-stick vinyl tiles from the hardware store, they're dirt cheap, somewhat flexible, durable, and easy to cut to size. It'd be a nice cheap way to make the room look more finished and it'd prolly adhere to your painted plywood well.
Thank you for the idea of peel and stick vinyl tiles, as I was just thinking how am I going to walk over the floor during the month that it is curing that it is curing that the paint is curing
I ❤️watching you videos great job
Post10 is the master of satisfaction. That floor is so well done!
Came out nice. I’ve been a scenic artist and painter for 35 years. The wall paint was probably ok provided a 1/2"-3/4" lamb skin roller sleeve is used. Try one. They’re a bit more expensive but they don’t spatter, apply better coverage and clean easily with water. Worth the investment as a painter. I have some 1.5" ones I’ve used for 5-10 years.
Happy Halloween man. That floor is freaking sweet! Great job
I bought an old rental house that had terrible pee stained carpet. I found that painted floors with area rugs worked great. At the time I did it for economic reasons, but I really liked the look.
Another option is the two-part epoxy floor paint they designed for garages. Those are more expensive, but the finish is practically bulletproof.
Epoxy floor paint, I'm saving that idea
I like it! My sister did it in her old house kitchen and it looks great and held up to three kids and 18 years later.
Looks Great! I think I would have had to filled in the cracks and sand before painting, but that’s my brain.
I’m going to do this, I’m also going to do a design before I do about 10 coats of acrylic seal
I specialize in flooring, and when I read that title I was like "Oh god, what the hell are they thinking?".
Surprisingly nice outcome though. Not my favorite cheap flooring solution (Personally I usually spring for LVP), but this looks like it will work in a pinch.
Would work well for a quick flooring for a house that was renovated for a buisness. But seems weird for a bedroom
@@micah_lee It's not too bad if you're selling the place, since the floor being painted doesn't matter if the next owner decides to put down new carpet or something nicer. And it really does help kill the urine smell, though there are some specialty paints that work even better.
I like your method for applying masking tape. Thumbs Up!!
Perfect room 👌.. now it just needs a culvert exit to practice speed whirlpools and get the technique a solid 10/10.. I watched the other video where the city folks used your rake, but were unable to weld it to your power. Keep up the amazing job sir! 🧡
Great job!! What an improvement!!
Wow. I'd heard that old saying about a coat of new paint improving the looks of a room, but I never believed it until now.
Man, you sure are so skillful at so many things! AND you appear to be ambidextrous as well! Wow! Thanks for sharing!
Is there Anything You can Do Post 10. I need some remodeling done to my house 🎃👻Happy Halloween
Can’t?
It sure turned out shiny and smooth! can a person fill in the spaces between the boards with plastic wood to eliminate the spaces? Can the paint be applied with a roller? thanks for posting this and thanks for your consideration.
What a change from the original room 👏
I like how it came out. Major improvement from before
Good job with flooring, shiny and ready to go as is or updates 😎👍
Nice work 😊✌😊✌
Looks much better.
The only problem with using painters tape is sometimes when you peel it off you can still get drips and runs and other imperfections that makes it's way under the tape or odd tape lines especially when you're laying it on thick. For a fast cheap job....sure. But if you're working on a higher end house with fancy trim work I recommend hand cutting with no tape. It takes longer and yes sometimes you're not always 100% straight but when the room is finished, unless if you're a pro painter specifically inspecting the work, you're not likely to notice it as long as your getting right up into the edge but not past it.
A good cut line requires some practice but here are some tips.... 1. Never over load your brush with too much paint. You really only want to load the bottom 1/4 of your brush. After several reloads if you find that the paint is taking over your brush to much it's time to give it a wash off. A steel brush works great to clean a paint brush when you start getting dried up paint on your bristles.
2. When cutting apply a good amount of pressure so that your bristles bend almost like 45 degree's on the wall and start a few inches below your cut line then drag your brush from left to right getting closer and closer to the edge line (like a car yeiding from a road onto the main highway) and when you hit that line point then level it out and keep that straight edge pressure going for length. Then reload and continue your edge by starting a little before where you left off so that you're merging again onto the cut line. Make sure you brush in a few inches of paint below your cut line too so that your entire cutting in line is a good 4 inches wide. You have to remember that when you go to use the roller that the roller itself can only reach so far before it hits the ceiling and you don't want that to happen. So the wider your cut line the more you'll lessen your chances of tapping the ceiling with your roller when you roll your walls.
3. Sometimes you can cut in the room twice before you add your first coat of paint. If you're lucky to get a nice one coat coverage because you went with a better paint and a good 3/4 thick roller nap then you can avoid that 2nd cut in problem because if you can still see the brush strokes on your cut line then you have to recut the room over your first rolled coat but when you do that you'll see a texture difference over the edge of where you rolled. Usually you want to roll OVER your cut. . . not CUT OVER your roll.
4. Have a cheap plastic painters pail to reload your brush instead of using the paint pan. looks like a kids sand bucket toy. You can hold it in your hand while you do your brushing instead of running up and down the ladder all the time to redip in the paint can or pan. This saves you from having your paint dry up. You can soak a rag and drape it over your pail to keep your paint wet while you break for a bit. This is also why you shouldn't over fill your paint pan like post10 did in this video. You need the ramp to squeeze off the excess but not too much. And if that paint sits too long in the pan small little flakes start to harden and form in it and they transfer to the wall when you roll. When it dries those flakes fall right off leaving behind open spots of bare wall. This is also important to keep your roller wet. Wrap it in plastic if you have to but make sure when you're done for the day that you clean it out really well. avoid those paint chips
This mans just painted a whole floor with a brush 😳
Roller cannot get into deep holes and cracks
Personally I think he should have used his trademark tool, a *rake* . 🤭
Yes it will. Use 3/4” or 1” nap roller cover.
And: you could have trimmed that switch plate better so it butted against the trim. No need for that hard edge and that gap.
I stained my house with a brush by myself and I am 67 years old. I prefer a brush. Something therapeutic about it.
Yeah a thick nap roller would have been way way faster and the paint would have been thicker. It would ooze into cracks and make it look better and smoother. I painted my 1000 sqft basement with a roller. It looked amazing.
Reminds me of my house. I bought a cheap house to reno it and removed all the carpet. Pulling up every staple took ages lol. I found gloves invaluable when dealing with the tack board though. That stuff is really pointy!
Job well done, Post! :)
Looks good, I think filling the joints would of really finished it off
Like I said there will be a large area rug so the outer few feet will be the only part seen
Just FYI, "would of" is a misspelling of "would've" which is short for "would have" and "would of" doesn't really mean anything.
@@bwalko5674 lol ok spelling nazi. Yes would have is correct...you get a gold star.
B Walko thank you I’m glad I’m not the only “spelling nazi” out there (it means you’RE smarter than the people who call you a nazi lol)
Paul Normandin I think he would prefer a cookie probably an Oreo or chocolate chip
You're a hard worker. Goid job.
Caulk in the cracks and touch them up with paint and it will be 1000 times nicer looking. Make sure to run a wet rag over the caulk to remove the excess before painting it.
It is bank owned and I do what I can with small budget
Turned out better than I expected. But gotta be careful with your paint roller technique. It’s better to work the entire wall rather than half the wall/small sections. Gonna end up with roller/brush lines when the light hits it’s. Also should have sanded that floor and filled the gaps and holes at least. Again turned out nice all and all!
Awesome job looks like your gonna flip that house in no time.
Turned out really good post 10 you did a great job
Wow very beautiful
Post 10 unclogs drains local authorities cant do, he can renovate houses. May he can sort out world priblems too?
Such a great idea!!!
Do you have other videos that lead us up to the videos of the floor in this room? Like when you acquired this home, I understand now it's a flip house. Can you show us the whole house? I just love all your videos, you are such an awesome young man. Also must add that April is getting so big, she is so lucky to have you.
Nice job compared to what you started with!
Nice job!
Good job u are a good worker 💖👍
Looks much better, fill the joints on floor and paint over.
I said it will be covered with area rug anyways
Very nice!
Looks great
Painting - use a cheap oil based paint thinned with mineral spirits 10% as a primer coat on the floor - that will seal the wood; then apply your expensive one coat floor paint. Make sure both your primer coat and top coat are the same kind of paint so they create a strong bond.
Good job, Buddy
I remember taking out all the staples when we switched to hardwood, that was a tedious and annoying process, lol
Post 10 just an all around good dude. Nice job
Oh Aladdin will be so Pleased with this.
Somewhere to land His Magical Prayer mat 😂😂
Looks good!!
Good job 👍
Would adding putty to the sub-floor before painting get rid of the cracks between the sheets of plywood?
I was wondering the same
@@funbrandi2603 Great minds think alike!
that cut (6:33) in the closet was really smooth i didnt even notice it at first and was really confused when you showed the switch plate in place.
Leave the door open when possible, put a fan in the door way , proper ventilation will help , @ 40 will take a good mont, nice mod !
My intention was for the strong oil smell to overwhelm the bad smell and it worked
@@post.10 I was thinking of cure time , nice job
I like it, looks nice . :)
This is cool, thanks for the video and ideas.
Good job man
Wow nice good job🤗
Hey man you know how to use to remove the staples, I would go and get a roofing shovel used for pulling off shingles off a roof that would be ideal because they already meant for pulling up nails and staples and it is six or more inches across very helpful
I have ice scrapers that work well but considering I wanted it unmarked for painting
Renovating with post 10 😁 ❤️👍
surprised you didn't put some kind of puddy to cover the lines in floor and use kilz primer on the floor first.. but it does look good..
i was surprised you didn't sand the floor before painting, but it still looked good afterwards
stains on the ceiling are from candles or other indoor flames.
How long does it take to cure/dry??
thanks for posting!
I would have used some wood filler to fill the seams in the plywood subfloor. It would give the room a nearer look.
great job! is this your home your selling?
Good job! Banks like to take money but not spend it.
If you used pincers Post it would pull those staples out alot easier and with much less hassle
Turned out really nice. What is this room in a home or building you are selling ?
So I live in North Carolina and just got an ad for a Detroit pizza place....🧐 I mean it looked awesome and would love to have some of Jetts pizza but I think the logistics might get in the way a bit .... nice job google now I want pizza I’ll never have 😡
Could there be a water leak above the part of the where the ceiling is stained?
Please wear a mask when cleaning up moldy things.
What product was used for the floor? No list of paint used🤒
Should have caulked the seams before painting otherwise looks great!