I have really enjoyed your instructions. My wife is sick and tired of me saying “this is how the Idaho painter does it” . The quality of my work is sooooo much better than I have done in the past !!! your tips have made a big difference. Many thanks
Just started a painting business! It has started off pretty rough but through your wisdom and techniques it has helped me grow and improve in quality! Thank you and God Bless 🙏🏻 Acts 2:38
Hamlet, NC here. Love your videos. Just found you a week ago. So working my way through them. When I was taught 20 years ago I was taught to do one wall at a time when using any paint with a sheen. Flat not so much.
I’m SOOOOO glad I found your channel!! Recently started a painting business kinda by accident. Been at it for a couple weeks now, and your channel has been absolutely INVALUABLE for tips/tricks in my quality of work and efficiency!!! I’m in East Central GA
As a Journeyman sheetmetal mechanic, I really appreciate when I see pride in work and quality work no matter what the trade. I am tackling my first DIY interior and exterior spray and am stoked to find your channel. Subbed. Thanks guys!
Spring Hill, Fl. enjoy your videos, I had no idea how wrong I've been painting all my life. I enjoy learning all your tips and tricks and really appreciate you sharing your knowledge.
Hey, Idaho painters! I run painting business in SC. Watching you almost a year, learned a lot of tricks, skills and improved my technique on higher level. You're doing great job, guys! Thanks for your videos. I also like to paint kitchen cabinets. Would like to practice with such experienced guys as you are.
Hi guys, I started my own decorating business here in the UK a couple of years ago and I have to say your tips have be invaluable to me, I bought an airless sprayer and you guys were the first people I came to for tips. However the best tip I put into use yesterday with getting a straight line when cutting in on textured wallpaper when using 2 different colours. The tape and caulk process was just brilliant, perfect lines! Thanks guys, I tune in every week,
Thanks again for a very detailed video on the ENTIRE process of painting a room, it really puts the bits and pieces together. This is a bit of a twist on masking with good tape, like Frog tape (which has changed my world), then pulling it off before the paint has totally set up. I may try the caulk route, but initially it looks like kind of an extra step that careful masking will do for you. John is really coming along in these videos and I enjoy his professional and experienced input more and more. Again, thanks so much for taking the mystery and misery out of painting for all of us. My paint of choice: Benjamin Moore Regal Select, usually egg shell. For cut in's, Purdy Clear Cut 3 inch brush, Wooster 3/8 ProDooz rollers. God bless!
Hey guys, I'm from southern California and I've been painting and re flooring my bedroom. Your videos have been what I have referred to every step of the way. Thank You! God bless
Been watching for almost a year now. I have improved my painting in a big way, speed and quality, since watching your videos. I prefer the 3" angled stiff Prudy brush (used to use a medium 2.5" angled sash brush). I agree, I tried lesser quality rollers and the nap was left on the walls. Had to scrape the walls and repaint. Your video asked to say where we are from...I'm from Kalamazoo, MI
I’m painting my new room soon so I was looking for a good video, and I’m glad I chose this one. You guys are good people, the way you both work together in a video makes it more engaging. You both let each other have a turn explaining and are very considerate of each other. Some videos are hard for me to watch because the people in it make me uncomfortable. Not the case here! I’ll use these tips, thanks so much.
I'm from oshawa Ontario in Canada. I love this channel and everything you guys do to help people learn. I'm so inspired and have learned so much. Thank you guys and God bless!
I own a small painting business, Brings in my primary income and funding in the markets.. Thinking I had nothing left to learn, watching your videos helps me stay humble in my journey. Thanks for the helpful information. Awesome videos
I noticed you didn't mention sanding the walls? What is your prep and do you sand between coats? How long are you waiting in between dry times before second coat? IS it really cheaper to use the 3m 2020 tape and then caulk vs just using green frog tape? I feel like it would be faster to just use green frog tape.
YES!! Another great video. I really like how you explain the topic and have a video of it going (picture in picture). I've been wondering how to improve my baseboard/trim strategy and I will try this out next job. Hope to see more videos focusing on solo jobs. Thanks from Canada!
Love the channel. I have learned a lot. Thank you. I sincerely appreciate your taking the take to share recognizing this is in addition to running your business. I am the quintessential solo painter you describe in this video; literally “Joe homeowner” working through my house one room at a time. Can you expand on this video a bit with recommended approach and best practices when the room includes painting ceiling and trim/doors? In several of your videos I noticed you spray trim before walls whenever possible (read: paint trim before walls). That seems to work better and faster. I historically believed there would be issues with semi trim sheen showing through on walls but your technique seems to address that concern. I used to do ceiling, walls, trim. After watching a lot of your videos, I changed to ceiling, trim, and walls. I no longer worry about getting flat or semi on the walls. I like this approach because I can go faster with both steps and then defer cutting in precision to straight lines on the flat surface walls. Does the tape/caulk method work equally well whether painting trim or walls? If I am painting walls last, can I tape off trim, caulk, paint the walls and get good results? When cutting in at ceilings or trim, do you try to get exactly in the transition crease or stay off 1/16 or 1/8? Drywall/caulk lines in my house are not perfect which means transition lines aren’t necessarily straight; I can be spot on but it will look sloppy. Wondering if it’s a better strategy to cut in slightly off the transition line to get a straighter paint line (i.e., bring the ceiling line down 1/16 onto the walls). Last thought: Here’s a taping tip that seems to help me. When applying Frog tape, I get it placed and then press and drag a clean dry cloth across it to smooth it out and ensure tight adhesion. The cloth conforms to the surfaces and gets into corners better than my fingers.
Fort Mill South Carolina here, to summarize........ 1.Clear the room 2. Prep walls, spackle holes, sand and dry mop walls. Clean off any grease and grime on wall and trim. 3. Spot prime holes or prime all walls intended to be painted. 4. Box the paint 5. (One wall at a time) cut in ceilings, corners and trim leaving 1/2 gap between trim and wet edge. Maintain wet edge working swiftly 6. Roll wall 7. Repeat steps 1-6, not including step 4, for remaining walls. 8. Start at first wall again, using appropriate caulk, bridge gap between masked trim wipe off excess caulk. LIGHTLY paint the caulk and gap from step 5 then immediately remove masking tape. 9. Repeat step 8 for remaining walls Am I missing anything??? My question is regarding vertical corner cut ins where one wall meets the next 90 degree wall. I get cutting in ceilings and baseboard and then rolling to maintain a wet edge. Otherwise haloing or lapping will show. How do you prevent that at the corner transitions. Do I cut that vertical edge in as well? Otherwise the next wall or adjoining walls may have lap marks after I finish the first wall. I did not hear you guys talk about that or explain that when cutting in. Thanks
You can also use deep paint base with no color in it to seal tape. Most brands of deep base dry claer and a sample size containers easy to have around.
How long will it be before the caulking and paint dry? Like if I’m painting a room by myself, what’s my working time with the tape/caulk? Like a few minutes or an hour, etc...
Watching from Elko,NV - thanks so much for having so much information in your videos AND for having the tools listed below!! So helpful for my upcoming projects. Still nervous to get started, but thanks to your videos,I'm not as nervous.
That’s a ton of great information guys. With all of the little asides though, it can get a bit jumbled though. It would be great if you could do a short vid of you painting one with these techniques with just the BOLD Headings like: 9-inch paper, ceiling cutting, precision tapping, close cutting, caulking, etc. etc. Repeating as necessary as you go around. You could speed it up to make it short but we could re-enforce the order of operations in our minds and the rhythm of the way you work around the room. Thanks guys!
Adding the steps in the description would go a long way. This would allow your audience to cut and paste the steps into their smartphone for reference when performing the task.
OMG amazing video.... It's so much more relatable to me having solo tips videos ( and most likely many more newly started solo paint companies) My hunny just ordered me a 3M handmasker for my birthday coming up...Im so excited
We have shed that some of the leftover paint is stored in. You can either pay to get rid of it according to your local laws and regulations, or find a way to give it away.
You mention flat paint with chaulking technique does cause some issues. Going to paint a bedroom with your chaulk technique, so what sheen do you recommend? Wife wants a pro look so been studying many of your videos and they are extremely helpful. She may might be impressed when I’m done 🤞🏻
Great videos! They have helped me a lot. I’m rebuilding after hurricane Harvey. I am spraying with graco magnum x5. Once I finish priming(walls and ceiling) I plan on painting the ceiling first. When I finish with the ceiling how should I do the walls to avoid getting a different color paint on the ceiling? There are no floors installed. Just bare empty rooms. Thanks in advance!
I'm not a professional painter but had the same question as you and in the vid they kind of contradicted their own statements with the short clips of them actually doing the painting. But I think the gist of what they were saying is as follows. Most base cut-ins are going to need two coats anyway so they said that they would first, mask everything off with basic 3m tape(or whatever tape you're using). Second, they would do the cut-ins, we will just focus on the base cut-ins since that is your question, they said that they would lay the first cut-in coat as close to the tape as you can WITHOUT actually hitting the tape itself BEFORE the caulk has been applied. This will leave about an 8th of an inch gap between the tape and your first paint cut in at the base. Third, go ahead and roll the entire wall. At this point the ceiling and base should be cut-in and the walls rolled but the base cut-in should not touch the tape and be as close as you could get to it without hitting the tape. Fourth, let the first coat dry. Finally, after the first coat has dried start the second ceiling cut-in. Next go down to the base, remember always working one wall at a time for us novice guys 😂, and hit the tape with your caulking. Once caulked, give it a second cut-in with the brush and as they say the 4" roller too, which IMO is a must, all the way to that tape actually hitting the tape itself so the 8th inch line you left from your first cut-in is completely covered. Then finish rolling that wall and immediately pull the tape. PRESTO!! A razor sharp line and a two coat complete cut-in. The 8th of an inch you left from the first cut-in is so short it will be covered and not show at all. That is one of the reasons I completely agree with the 4 inch roller idea as it puts even more paint on the wall than the brush could have and matches the texture of the entire wall application. I hope this helps as I had the same questions as you going into things and while the guys where thorough the vids they showed conflicted a bit in the information given. For myself, my first coat was left for a day and dried over night so the taping I did was with frog tape that could be left on over night like John said instead of the basic 3m tape they showed, that way I wouldn't have a problem the next day with the tape being removed. But my room was small about 14 x 12. But If your doing all coats in one day, say, one in the morning then one in the afternoon you can just use the 3m stuff it's much much cheaper. Hope this helped and let me know if I missed anything I am always learning myself. Sorry it was so long winded.
Can you use a sprayer in a full furniture hose. What's the risk of it??. Can you get the same quality of paint work with roller versus sprayer in a interior walls??
Thx for this walkthrough. One question I have is I’m moving on to the 2nd coat. Do you 2nd coat the top, caulk/paint baseboard then roll 2nd coat or do you roll 2nd coat then caulk/paint baseboard?
I am a Canadian. I am moving 2000 miles east from Edmonton. I will be painting walls in my new home 🏡 . Show me how to pull off the tape. Slow or fast.? I like the caulking idea. I never seen this before. Thank you very much. Donna Peers. P.s. How long should it take one person to paint a full room? I am a novice.
Slow would be the best option but usually it doesn’t matter if you don’t let the caulk and paint dry;If your caulk does dry just pull it slowly and where you see it coming out funky just get a blade and line it . A Pro can usually finish a 10x10 room in about 4 or 5hrs.Anyways Goodluck
I would think you would leave tape in place until room is cut in twice and rolled twice to eliminate paint from getting on baseboard. If tape is applied properly there should not be any bleed through as long as surface you are taping to is smooth. Any bleedthrough can be touched up when job is complete.
Paint Life TV As we all know there are many different ways to paint interior walls and trim. . When I started painting 25 years ago I did very little taping due to the fact that most of my work involved trim that was stained, not painted white which is much more common these days. Many people are going with darker colors along with their white trim and this requires very straight lines to make for a quality paint job. That being said, we clean, sand, caulk, and paint all trim before starting on walls. Once trim paint has dried properly we tape very carefully and precisely using 3M blue or green frog tape.Door casings are easiest to tape but some baseboards Can be tricky depending on surface area at top of baseboard. If we can’t tape baseboard we will cut this in freehand. If taped areas are done the right way, you can cut in quickly completely relying on tape to protect wood work. Tape should be able to stay on woodwork four a couple of days if needed. It’s also important to use the proper technique for pulling tape when job is done.
Been watching you guys for a while love the way you explain (very detailed) Question, I have a room that I'm painting all white, what texture paint should I use for the walls, ceiling and moulding to make it look elegant? Thanks again for your expertise ( Michigan)
quick question. I am in the middle of painting a bedroom. I ended up cleaning, deglossing and minorly sanding and then vacuuming the door trim/casing and window trim/casing. 2 coats of primer caulked every joint and then 2-3 coats of top coat, in order to change from golden oak to white. All of this before putting color on the walls to make it easier on myself. My question is, I used semi gloss for the trim paint and of course semi gloss got on the walls a little bit around the doors and windows. I will be using a satin on the walls. Will the semi gloss show through the satin? If so, what is the best way to "hide/cover" the semi gloss that is now on the walls? Should I cut back in with primer closer to the door and window trim in order to cover up the semi gloss? Should I use a quick deglosser? Please help with any advice. I just dont want to have a semi gloss ring around the windows and doors on the wall.
I have just started to paint my home, I do it alone and I'm not working very fast. I also have a very big living room and I don't think I can finish it in one day. My question is: Can I let it half painted one o two days or if I start a room I have to finish it entirely??? Thanks and nice work you do out there!
Nice method, but after you pull the tape after you caulk and cut in the bottom, the walls arnt rolled yet, so what do you do about paint splatter on the trim whilr your rolling the walls? I would like to start using this method. And we aleayd use frog tape, but i guess we dont need to?
Y’all are really good at what you do but I’ve never heard of doing the caulking method I’ve been painting for about 18 years,I’ve never heard that method before I would assume that the caulking would get into the brush when you paint because it’s still wet,I’ve always caulked before Let it dry then tape the baseboards And then paint the walls but I’ll try your method to see if it really works!!! Y’all always have great videos A lot of great tips
Hi, been watching your vids for a few years now and they are great. We have high ceilings in our house so my wife wanted large baseboards to look aesthetically right. So the baseboards are 3/4" thick by 8" tall which dont provide much flexibility. This makes it difficult to hug the baseboard against the drywall at times when there are any "waves" in the drywall. My question is when you go to tape off the baseboard in preparation to paint the wall, do you line the tape up with the edge of the drywall or the edge of the baseboard? sometimes there are gaps as much as 1/4" that I have to fill with caulk. Thanks, Bob
We are making changes and eventually will not be answering any questions on UA-cam, but we are directing people to the private paint life members group where other painters in the community can answer questions. It will be a closed group on Facebook. Feel free to check it out! facebook.com/groups/2305219262837596/
I saw your website in this months APC magazine. I have been painting in Oklahoma City for 40 plus years having followed in my Grandfather's footsteps. He was a Union trade school instructor. He used to rail about painters running tape to cut in against was unprofessional and cheating. Ha! Walls were straighter back then carpenters were better too. Taping off properly is a skill in itself. Here painters in new construction tape off and back fill with caulk to fill the gap between wall and wood they knife the caulk off the edge of the paint so it not only fills the gap it seals the tape. If you knife the caulk off the edge of the tape you can let it dry and it pull clean. Sometimes with sheened paints if you don't let it dry thoroughly paint will come with it up the wall which is not good. Your method seems to solve that problem. Especially when you are trying to complete a room in a day and not come back and remove the next day. I have a variation on this method that you may want to try. After taping off the room and instead of caulking the tape edge cut in and dry brush the edge then cut in the ceiling and corners roll the walls to complete first coat. Since the tape edge is now sealed you can brush against the tape and pull while it is wet on vertical runs the baseboard you roll first and drag a brush over the tape edge and pull one wall at a time. I have been painting walls this way for 20 plus years and it really works.
I'm looking at a room with all kinds of bumps, rough spots and drip runs. Basically, a very poorly painted room. What the best, fastest way to prepare these walls?
The drip runs will need to be hand sanded with a fine grit sand PAPER, not a pad. The majority of the roughness on the wall can be taken down pretty quickly with a simple sanding head on a pole, again using fine grit sand paper. Really stubborn bumps and such that would take too long to sand can be scraped or popped off with a putty knife or pushed into the wall with the butt end of the handle of the putty knife, then spackled afterwards to cover the dents of course.
Well, there is either the best way, or the fastest way. The best way is going to be to re-textured or re-skim coat. The fastest way is to do a combination of sanding, spot priming, and scraping.
If the baseboards need to be sanded, caulked and painted, do you do that first while sanding the walls, THEN mask the boards (when they dry) and do the caulk/tape/"laser line" technique?
Hey, thank you for being here with us! Due to the overwhelming amount of messages we get each day, we have created an amazing community through a private FaceBook group called Paint Life Mafia. Join us for private live shows and much more. Only members will be allowed to enter and interact in the group, creating a tighter knit community of painters. Each tier has different perks, depending on what you are looking for. Click here to learn more about this EXCLUSIVE group and join: facebook.com/groups/2305219262837596/ Special Thanks - Chris Berry, The Idaho Painter
Great videos. Hey chris I have a question I do a lot of finish carpentry and I own a cordless Graco tc plus and it’s way to bulky to spray inside cabinets and tight spots. I’m looking to get a small sprayer rig something inexpensive what would you recommend? Only will be used for trim an finish work thanks bud.
I have a question: in this video I notice you didn't prime the walls first before you paint the wall. when do you have to prime the walls? also how do you decide when to use a roller or use a sprayer?
I'm confused your first coat you do you top cut in pretty normal but your bottom cutting you roll with your forms roller close to the tape on top of the baseboard so you leave a half inch to an inch gap of the wall not cut in the first coat and then after your done rolling your first coat you use the caulking method and cut into the tape with a brush and also use the 4 inch roller to roll out most of your brush marks and that half-inch or so that's only been cut in once with the brush doesn't flash on you a lot? I'm really curious because I've never cut in like that before I've never used a 4-inch brush against my cut in either I always just cut everything in and then just role as close as I can with my 9 and I will normally use a dry brush up against the tape to make sure I don't get any bleed through and it just takes two coats. I like the caulking/laser straight-line method though I'm going to give it a try
Hey dudes, thanks so much for the tips!! I am painting my bedroom. I just got done repairing a hole in the ceiling and filled in nail holes. I sanded and cleaned the dust off the walls and ceiling. My question is, do I need to prime the entire room (walls and ceiling) or just apply primer to the hole repair on the ceiling and the nail holes? Seems like most videos I have looked at only apply the primer to holes and areas that were repaired. Thanks for any advice!! :)
Hey, thank you for being here with us! Due to the overwhelming amount of messages we get each day, we have created an amazing community through a private Facebook group called Paint Life Mafia. Today is the LAST DAY to sign up and open enrollment closes at 12 am MT. This is a three tier membership program where we will be spending a majority of our time answering questions and pouring into the people who matter most, the Mafia. Join us for private live shows and much more. Only members will be allowed to enter and interact in the group, creating a tighter knit community of painters. Each tier has different perks, depending on what you are looking for. Click here to learn more about this EXCLUSIVE group and join: paintlifemafia.com/ Special Thanks-Chris Berry, The Idaho Painter
Here's a tip if you're use flatwall two gallons of the same paint is cool .If your putting semigloss on ,have a less expensive flat paint tinted to the same color ..covers better then two coats of semi gloss
Thanks for the video, love your channel, I consider you guys "new school" painters only bc I was taught by my grandpa how to paint the old school way, I tried this technique today it made it faster, however I used a light gray paint and had the halo. Could you please make a video on particular colors or types that don't halo. I've only had halo effect on lighter colors, is this normal? Please let me know. Thanks guys!!! Oklahoma
Hi! Chris a great educational video if you can do one for Painters and DIY. Interior and Exterior Paint Problems and Remedies! Example: peeling paint, chalking, alligatoring, checking, fish eyes.... Always nice to tune in to your Videos great tips and tricks of the trade! Don gooseneck guy!
Hi friends. I'll be painting my remodel bathroom pretty soon. Since I'll be installing crown molding and the ceiling and walls will be different colors, how far I need to go with the paints to the corners? Thank you . Esteban
How much you charge for a room of that size with all materials in the uk i get anywhere between £280-£450 depending on which brand paint the client chooses, I do it in 1-2 days max again depending on filling etc
do you have any idea why when I am rolling, if I go over an area, then come back to smooth out a line or get better coverage, the paint begins to smear and almost come off the wall? (like it is not sticking to the wall at all, it gets really messy and is hard to correct) It has happened with rollers and brushes, and different types of paint. Am I missing a step or something? Love all of your vids, new starter over here in the UK :)
I have really enjoyed your instructions. My wife is sick and tired of me saying “this is how the Idaho painter does it” . The quality of my work is sooooo much better than I have done in the past !!! your tips have made a big difference. Many thanks
Just started a painting business! It has started off pretty rough but through your wisdom and techniques it has helped me grow and improve in quality! Thank you and God Bless 🙏🏻 Acts 2:38
Hamlet, NC here. Love your videos. Just found you a week ago. So working my way through them. When I was taught 20 years ago I was taught to do one wall at a time when using any paint with a sheen. Flat not so much.
I’m SOOOOO glad I found your channel!! Recently started a painting business kinda by accident. Been at it for a couple weeks now, and your channel has been absolutely INVALUABLE for tips/tricks in my quality of work and efficiency!!! I’m in East Central GA
As a Journeyman sheetmetal mechanic, I really appreciate when I see pride in work and quality work no matter what the trade. I am tackling my first DIY interior and exterior spray and am stoked to find your channel. Subbed. Thanks guys!
I’ve watched this so many times. Always like learning from a Pro. Rock on guys!
Spring Hill, Fl. enjoy your videos, I had no idea how wrong I've been painting all my life. I enjoy learning all your tips and tricks and really appreciate you sharing your knowledge.
Hey, Idaho painters! I run painting business in SC. Watching you almost a year, learned a lot of tricks, skills and improved my technique on higher level. You're doing great job, guys! Thanks for your videos. I also like to paint kitchen cabinets. Would like to practice with such experienced guys as you are.
Thanks for your support Deny
Hi guys, I started my own decorating business here in the UK a couple of years ago and I have to say your tips have be invaluable to me, I bought an airless sprayer and you guys were the first people I came to for tips. However the best tip I put into use yesterday with getting a straight line when cutting in on textured wallpaper when using 2 different colours. The tape and caulk process was just brilliant, perfect lines!
Thanks guys, I tune in every week,
Thanks again for a very detailed video on the ENTIRE process of painting a room, it really puts the bits and pieces together. This is a bit of a twist on masking with good tape, like Frog tape (which has changed my world), then pulling it off before the paint has totally set up. I may try the caulk route, but initially it looks like kind of an extra step that careful masking will do for you. John is really coming along in these videos and I enjoy his professional and experienced input more and more. Again, thanks so much for taking the mystery and misery out of painting for all of us. My paint of choice: Benjamin Moore Regal Select, usually egg shell. For cut in's, Purdy Clear Cut 3 inch brush, Wooster 3/8 ProDooz rollers. God bless!
Hey guys, I'm from southern California and I've been painting and re flooring my bedroom. Your videos have been what I have referred to every step of the way. Thank You! God bless
Thanks for all the great tips. Much appreciated from a home owner wanting to paint the right way👍👍
Been watching for almost a year now. I have improved my painting in a big way, speed and quality, since watching your videos. I prefer the 3" angled stiff Prudy brush (used to use a medium 2.5" angled sash brush). I agree, I tried lesser quality rollers and the nap was left on the walls. Had to scrape the walls and repaint. Your video asked to say where we are from...I'm from Kalamazoo, MI
Awesome, thanks for sharing and supporting Greg!
I’m painting my new room soon so I was looking for a good video, and I’m glad I chose this one. You guys are good people, the way you both work together in a video makes it more engaging. You both let each other have a turn explaining and are very considerate of each other. Some videos are hard for me to watch because the people in it make me uncomfortable. Not the case here! I’ll use these tips, thanks so much.
Thanks for watching Jane!
I'm from oshawa Ontario in Canada. I love this channel and everything you guys do to help people learn. I'm so inspired and have learned so much. Thank you guys and God bless!
Thanks for the support Robert!
I own a small painting business, Brings in my primary income and funding in the markets.. Thinking I had nothing left to learn, watching your videos helps me stay humble in my journey. Thanks for the helpful information. Awesome videos
Love your channel, really allows the DIY individual approach project professionally, making job enjoyable vs. chore
Thanks for watching Barry!
Hey guy's, just caught your video on painting room by yourself. Great tips you guy's are the best. Rick Jeannette, pa.
Thanks Rick!
I noticed you didn't mention sanding the walls? What is your prep and do you sand between coats? How long are you waiting in between dry times before second coat? IS it really cheaper to use the 3m 2020 tape and then caulk vs just using green frog tape? I feel like it would be faster to just use green frog tape.
YES!! Another great video. I really like how you explain the topic and have a video of it going (picture in picture). I've been wondering how to improve my baseboard/trim strategy and I will try this out next job. Hope to see more videos focusing on solo jobs. Thanks from Canada!
I'm a painter in Dallas with a 5 man crew. Thanks for your videos!!
You are welcome!!
Hit us up if you got work
Love the channel. I have learned a lot. Thank you. I sincerely appreciate your taking the take to share recognizing this is in addition to running your business.
I am the quintessential solo painter you describe in this video; literally “Joe homeowner” working through my house one room at a time. Can you expand on this video a bit with recommended approach and best practices when the room includes painting ceiling and trim/doors?
In several of your videos I noticed you spray trim before walls whenever possible (read: paint trim before walls). That seems to work better and faster. I historically believed there would be issues with semi trim sheen showing through on walls but your technique seems to address that concern.
I used to do ceiling, walls, trim. After watching a lot of your videos, I changed to ceiling, trim, and walls. I no longer worry about getting flat or semi on the walls. I like this approach because I can go faster with both steps and then defer cutting in precision to straight lines on the flat surface walls.
Does the tape/caulk method work equally well whether painting trim or walls? If I am painting walls last, can I tape off trim, caulk, paint the walls and get good results?
When cutting in at ceilings or trim, do you try to get exactly in the transition crease or stay off 1/16 or 1/8? Drywall/caulk lines in my house are not perfect which means transition lines aren’t necessarily straight; I can be spot on but it will look sloppy. Wondering if it’s a better strategy to cut in slightly off the transition line to get a straighter paint line (i.e., bring the ceiling line down 1/16 onto the walls).
Last thought: Here’s a taping tip that seems to help me. When applying Frog tape, I get it placed and then press and drag a clean dry cloth across it to smooth it out and ensure tight adhesion. The cloth conforms to the surfaces and gets into corners better than my fingers.
Awesome, thanks for sharing Joe!
Likely a stupid question, but I’m assuming baseboards and trim are painted first? When do you paint those?
I love the development over the years, the tips remain strong also
Fort Mill South Carolina here,
to summarize........
1.Clear the room
2. Prep walls, spackle holes, sand and dry mop walls. Clean off any grease and grime on wall and trim.
3. Spot prime holes or prime all walls intended to be painted.
4. Box the paint
5. (One wall at a time) cut in ceilings, corners and trim leaving 1/2 gap between trim and wet edge. Maintain wet edge working swiftly
6. Roll wall
7. Repeat steps 1-6, not including step 4, for remaining walls.
8. Start at first wall again, using appropriate caulk, bridge gap between masked trim wipe off excess caulk. LIGHTLY paint the caulk and gap from step 5 then immediately remove masking tape.
9. Repeat step 8 for remaining walls
Am I missing anything???
My question is regarding vertical corner cut ins where one wall meets the next 90 degree wall. I get cutting in ceilings and baseboard and then rolling to maintain a wet edge. Otherwise haloing or lapping will show.
How do you prevent that at the corner transitions.
Do I cut that vertical edge in as well? Otherwise the next wall or adjoining walls may have lap marks after I finish the first wall.
I did not hear you guys talk about that or explain that when cutting in.
Thanks
Thanks for the good tips Paint Life! Gotta get me some of that swag soon.... from Vancouver Canada. Cheers!
Thanks for the support!
You can also use deep paint base with no color in it to seal tape. Most brands of deep base dry claer and a sample size containers easy to have around.
Thanks for sharing David!
How long will it be before the caulking and paint dry? Like if I’m painting a room by myself, what’s my working time with the tape/caulk? Like a few minutes or an hour, etc...
Watching from Elko,NV - thanks so much for having so much information in your videos AND for having the tools listed below!! So helpful for my upcoming projects. Still nervous to get started, but thanks to your videos,I'm not as nervous.
Glad to help, thanks for watching!
pro Painter here from Canada, Ontario. Don't like the weather here. I've always wanted to move down south. Maybe I'll come work for you guys.
Thanks guys,you have an awesome team of painters... I totally understood that entire video.
Thanks Keno!
That’s a ton of great information guys. With all of the little asides though, it can get a bit jumbled though. It would be great if you could do a short vid of you painting one with these techniques with just the BOLD Headings like: 9-inch paper, ceiling cutting, precision tapping, close cutting, caulking, etc. etc. Repeating as necessary as you go around. You could speed it up to make it short but we could re-enforce the order of operations in our minds and the rhythm of the way you work around the room. Thanks guys!
Good idea! Thank you for the feedback!
Adding the steps in the description would go a long way. This would allow your audience to cut and paste the steps into their smartphone for reference when performing the task.
I use my 5in1 to put holes in the gallon can of paint to make sure I get everything especially on costume colors
OMG amazing video.... It's so much more relatable to me having solo tips videos ( and most likely many more newly started solo paint companies) My hunny just ordered me a 3M handmasker for my birthday coming up...Im so excited
Thanks for all the support Brian, and have a happy birthday!
Thank you yall. Solo homeowner. very helpful.
Mr berry I thank you and your team for the valuable advice and hellow from reedville Va
Thanks for watching & supporting Robert!
The best takeaway is that every room takes about 2 gallons of paint. Thx for another great video 👊
Your welcome thanks for being with us🤙
How does your process change when painting the ceiling and trim? Would it make sense to paint trim, paint the ceiling, then do what you said here?
Matthew Wasserman curious as well.
Can you go over how to store paint, where, container? also how to get rid of paint.
We have shed that some of the leftover paint is stored in. You can either pay to get rid of it according to your local laws and regulations, or find a way to give it away.
I'm in Cleveland, Ohio. Keep up the great work, and thanks for all of your videos
Thanks for watching Kenn!
You mention flat paint with chaulking technique does cause some issues. Going to paint a bedroom with your chaulk technique, so what sheen do you recommend? Wife wants a pro look so been studying many of your videos and they are extremely helpful. She may might be impressed when I’m done 🤞🏻
Great videos! They have helped me a lot. I’m rebuilding after hurricane Harvey. I am spraying with graco magnum x5. Once I finish priming(walls and ceiling) I plan on painting the ceiling first. When I finish with the ceiling how should I do the walls to avoid getting a different color paint on the ceiling? There are no floors installed. Just bare empty rooms. Thanks in advance!
Lemoore CA. Keep up the good work. Always giving great tips. Much appreciated. Cheers!!!
What about using one of those "perfect cutters" that come as a roller or brush with a guard attached which eliminates the need to caulk & tape?
We do not recommend those
What do you do if your bottom cut in requires 2 coats. How do you do the caulk tape method if you have to do 2 coats?
I'm not a professional painter but had the same question as you and in the vid they kind of contradicted their own statements with the short clips of them actually doing the painting. But I think the gist of what they were saying is as follows. Most base cut-ins are going to need two coats anyway so they said that they would first, mask everything off with basic 3m tape(or whatever tape you're using). Second, they would do the cut-ins, we will just focus on the base cut-ins since that is your question, they said that they would lay the first cut-in coat as close to the tape as you can WITHOUT actually hitting the tape itself BEFORE the caulk has been applied. This will leave about an 8th of an inch gap between the tape and your first paint cut in at the base. Third, go ahead and roll the entire wall. At this point the ceiling and base should be cut-in and the walls rolled but the base cut-in should not touch the tape and be as close as you could get to it without hitting the tape. Fourth, let the first coat dry. Finally, after the first coat has dried start the second ceiling cut-in. Next go down to the base, remember always working one wall at a time for us novice guys 😂, and hit the tape with your caulking. Once caulked, give it a second cut-in with the brush and as they say the 4" roller too, which IMO is a must, all the way to that tape actually hitting the tape itself so the 8th inch line you left from your first cut-in is completely covered. Then finish rolling that wall and immediately pull the tape. PRESTO!! A razor sharp line and a two coat complete cut-in. The 8th of an inch you left from the first cut-in is so short it will be covered and not show at all. That is one of the reasons I completely agree with the 4 inch roller idea as it puts even more paint on the wall than the brush could have and matches the texture of the entire wall application.
I hope this helps as I had the same questions as you going into things and while the guys where thorough the vids they showed conflicted a bit in the information given. For myself, my first coat was left for a day and dried over night so the taping I did was with frog tape that could be left on over night like John said instead of the basic 3m tape they showed, that way I wouldn't have a problem the next day with the tape being removed. But my room was small about 14 x 12. But If your doing all coats in one day, say, one in the morning then one in the afternoon you can just use the 3m stuff it's much much cheaper.
Hope this helped and let me know if I missed anything I am always learning myself. Sorry it was so long winded.
What if you were spraying that room and you had to apply two coats how would you deal with the tape and caulking ?
Oregon here... So those red walls didn't need primer?
Seems like they would if not three Coats of finish then
What do you do for clients who do not take furniture out of the rooms?
Can you use a sprayer in a full furniture hose.
What's the risk of it??.
Can you get the same quality of paint work with roller versus sprayer in a interior walls??
Great video. Went on the website to purchase the corner roller couldn’t find it 😕. Please let me know we’re I could purchase. Thanks🙂
Thx for this walkthrough. One question I have is I’m moving on to the 2nd coat. Do you 2nd coat the top, caulk/paint baseboard then roll 2nd coat or do you roll 2nd coat then caulk/paint baseboard?
I hve a video explaining it all
I am a Canadian. I am moving 2000 miles east from Edmonton. I will be painting walls in my new home 🏡 . Show me how to pull off the tape. Slow or fast.? I like the caulking idea. I never seen this before. Thank you very much. Donna Peers.
P.s. How long should it take one person to paint a full room? I am a novice.
Slow would be the best option but usually it doesn’t matter if you don’t let the caulk and paint dry;If your caulk does dry just pull it slowly and where you see it coming out funky just get a blade and line it . A Pro can usually finish a 10x10 room in about 4 or 5hrs.Anyways Goodluck
I would think you would leave tape in place until room is cut in twice and rolled twice to eliminate paint from getting on baseboard. If tape is applied properly there should not be any bleed through as long as surface you are taping to is smooth. Any bleedthrough can be touched up when job is complete.
You cannot let the paint dry before pulling the tape, because then you will have peeling
Paint Life TV
As we all know there are many different ways to paint interior walls and trim. . When I started painting 25 years ago I did very little taping due to the fact that most of my work involved trim that was stained, not painted white which is much more common these days. Many people are going with darker colors along with their white trim and this requires very straight lines to make for a quality paint job. That being said, we clean, sand, caulk, and paint all trim before starting on walls. Once trim paint has dried properly we tape very carefully and precisely using 3M blue or green frog tape.Door casings are easiest to tape but some baseboards Can be tricky depending on surface area at top of baseboard. If we can’t tape baseboard we will cut this in freehand. If taped areas are done the right way, you can cut in quickly completely relying on tape to protect wood work. Tape should be able to stay on woodwork four a couple of days if needed. It’s also important to use the proper technique for pulling tape when job is done.
Hi did you gloss the boards first? Just wondered why you taped the boards before the walls. Thanks
Been watching you guys for a while love the way you explain (very detailed)
Question, I have a room that I'm painting all white, what texture paint should I use for the walls, ceiling and moulding to make it look elegant? Thanks again for your expertise ( Michigan)
You can paint everything Satin, or paint the trim semi-gloss.
quick question. I am in the middle of painting a bedroom. I ended up cleaning, deglossing and minorly sanding and then vacuuming the door trim/casing and window trim/casing. 2 coats of primer caulked every joint and then 2-3 coats of top coat, in order to change from golden oak to white. All of this before putting color on the walls to make it easier on myself.
My question is, I used semi gloss for the trim paint and of course semi gloss got on the walls a little bit around the doors and windows. I will be using a satin on the walls. Will the semi gloss show through the satin? If so, what is the best way to "hide/cover" the semi gloss that is now on the walls? Should I cut back in with primer closer to the door and window trim in order to cover up the semi gloss? Should I use a quick deglosser?
Please help with any advice. I just dont want to have a semi gloss ring around the windows and doors on the wall.
Not from our experience using the paints we use
I have just started to paint my home, I do it alone and I'm not working very fast. I also have a very big living room and I don't think I can finish it in one day. My question is: Can I let it half painted one o two days or if I start a room I have to finish it entirely??? Thanks and nice work you do out there!
It would be okay if you finish whole sections. Don't stop in the middle of a wall. Go corner to corner.
Nice method, but after you pull the tape after you caulk and cut in the bottom, the walls arnt rolled yet, so what do you do about paint splatter on the trim whilr your rolling the walls? I would like to start using this method. And we aleayd use frog tape, but i guess we dont need to?
Don't put so much paint on your roller and it won't splatter
Y’all are really good at what you do but I’ve never heard of doing the caulking method
I’ve been painting for about 18 years,I’ve never heard that method before
I would assume that the caulking would get into the brush when you paint because it’s still wet,I’ve always caulked before
Let it dry then tape the baseboards And then paint the walls but I’ll try your method to see if it really works!!!
Y’all always have great videos
A lot of great tips
It works for us!
Hey, how did you get the camera soo high during the opening scenes. Love the intro. When you back in the UK chris. Missed you last time.
Our awesome drone!
Wow thanks ...I love you all team special you sr.
Am I to understand that you only do cut ins with one coat of paint?
Hi, been watching your vids for a few years now and they are great. We have high ceilings in our house so my wife wanted large baseboards to look aesthetically right. So the baseboards are 3/4" thick by 8" tall which dont provide much flexibility. This makes it difficult to hug the baseboard against the drywall at times when there are any "waves" in the drywall. My question is when you go to tape off the baseboard in preparation to paint the wall, do you line the tape up with the edge of the drywall or the edge of the baseboard? sometimes there are gaps as much as 1/4" that I have to fill with caulk.
Thanks, Bob
We are making changes and eventually will not be answering any questions on UA-cam, but we are directing people to the private paint life members group where other painters in the community can answer questions. It will be a closed group on Facebook. Feel free to check it out! facebook.com/groups/2305219262837596/
I saw your website in this months APC magazine. I have been painting in Oklahoma City for 40 plus years having followed in my Grandfather's footsteps. He was a Union trade school instructor. He used to rail about painters running tape to cut in against was unprofessional and cheating. Ha! Walls were straighter back then carpenters were better too. Taping off properly is a skill in itself. Here painters in new construction tape off and back fill with caulk to fill the gap between wall and wood they knife the caulk off the edge of the paint so it not only fills the gap it seals the tape. If you knife the caulk off the edge of the tape you can let it dry and it pull clean. Sometimes with sheened paints if you don't let it dry thoroughly paint will come with it up the wall which is not good. Your method seems to solve that problem. Especially when you are trying to complete a room in a day and not come back and remove the next day. I have a variation on this method that you may want to try. After taping off the room and instead of caulking the tape edge cut in and dry brush the edge then cut in the ceiling and corners roll the walls to complete first coat. Since the tape edge is now sealed you can brush against the tape and pull while it is wet on vertical runs the baseboard you roll first and drag a brush over the tape edge and pull one wall at a time. I have been painting walls this way for 20 plus years and it really works.
Awesome, thanks for sharing Jim!
I'm looking at a room with all kinds of bumps, rough spots and drip runs. Basically, a very poorly painted room. What the best, fastest way to prepare these walls?
The drip runs will need to be hand sanded with a fine grit sand PAPER, not a pad. The majority of the roughness on the wall can be taken down pretty quickly with a simple sanding head on a pole, again using fine grit sand paper. Really stubborn bumps and such that would take too long to sand can be scraped or popped off with a putty knife or pushed into the wall with the butt end of the handle of the putty knife, then spackled afterwards to cover the dents of course.
Well, there is either the best way, or the fastest way. The best way is going to be to re-textured or re-skim coat. The fastest way is to do a combination of sanding, spot priming, and scraping.
When you repaint a room like this, do you have to sand it down before? Do you need a prime coat?
Brooklyn, NY
You guys are awesome!
If the baseboards need to be sanded, caulked and painted, do you do that first while sanding the walls, THEN mask the boards (when they dry) and do the caulk/tape/"laser line" technique?
Hey, thank you for being here with us! Due to the overwhelming amount of messages we get each day, we have created an amazing community through a private FaceBook group called Paint Life Mafia. Join us for private live shows and much more. Only members will be allowed to enter and interact in the group, creating a tighter knit community of painters. Each tier has different perks, depending on what you are looking for. Click here to learn more about this EXCLUSIVE group and join: facebook.com/groups/2305219262837596/
Special Thanks - Chris Berry, The Idaho Painter
Hey don’t you get crack caulking by painting on wet caulking and why you use gloves to put it?
I love the system they use, makes total sense PEOPLE LISTEN BEST PAINTING ADVICE ON YOU TUBE to date they're great professionals👌🤜🤛✊
Thanks for the support man!
Do you use clear caulk on stained trim? Thanks, your videos are great.
Great videos. Hey chris I have a question I do a lot of finish carpentry and I own a cordless Graco tc plus and it’s way to bulky to spray inside cabinets and tight spots. I’m looking to get a small sprayer rig something inexpensive what would you recommend? Only will be used for trim an finish work thanks bud.
It looks like you guys are only doing 1 coat of paint with the caulking. Is that’s true?
I have a question: in this video I notice you didn't prime the walls first before you paint the wall. when do you have to prime the walls? also how do you decide when to use a roller or use a sprayer?
We normally roll interiors unless they are completely empty. We do not normally prime, only under certain circumstances or new construction
You guys are awesome. Learned alot . tnx
Thanks for watching Joe!
Victoria, Tx
Great video keep them coming
Thanks for watching David!
I'm confused your first coat you do you top cut in pretty normal but your bottom cutting you roll with your forms roller close to the tape on top of the baseboard so you leave a half inch to an inch gap of the wall not cut in the first coat and then after your done rolling your first coat you use the caulking method and cut into the tape with a brush and also use the 4 inch roller to roll out most of your brush marks and that half-inch or so that's only been cut in once with the brush doesn't flash on you a lot? I'm really curious because I've never cut in like that before I've never used a 4-inch brush against my cut in either I always just cut everything in and then just role as close as I can with my 9 and I will normally use a dry brush up against the tape to make sure I don't get any bleed through and it just takes two coats. I like the caulking/laser straight-line method though I'm going to give it a try
Just a tip...nobody is going to read a novel here. Say it in 2 sentences.
Hey dudes, thanks so much for the tips!! I am painting my bedroom. I just got done repairing a hole in the ceiling and filled in nail holes. I sanded and cleaned the dust off the walls and ceiling. My question is, do I need to prime the entire room (walls and ceiling) or just apply primer to the hole repair on the ceiling and the nail holes? Seems like most videos I have looked at only apply the primer to holes and areas that were repaired. Thanks for any advice!! :)
Hey, thank you for being here with us! Due to the overwhelming amount of messages we get each day, we have created an amazing community through a private Facebook group called Paint Life Mafia. Today is the LAST DAY to sign up and open enrollment closes at 12 am MT.
This is a three tier membership program where we will be spending a majority of our time answering questions and pouring into the people who matter most, the Mafia. Join us for private live shows and much more. Only members will be allowed to enter and interact in the group, creating a tighter knit community of painters. Each tier has different perks, depending on what you are looking for. Click here to learn more about this EXCLUSIVE group and join: paintlifemafia.com/
Special Thanks-Chris Berry, The Idaho Painter
Great tips fellas👍 Keep up.the good work.
Thank you!
ye guys are a good team. nice video
Thank you
Isn't the frog tape enough for getting a straight line rather than caulking also the tape?
Not always
Here's a tip if you're use flatwall two gallons of the same paint is cool .If your putting semigloss on ,have a less expensive flat paint tinted to the same color ..covers better then two coats of semi gloss
Nice
Is there a way to get two coats in with the caulking trick? If I put my tape immediately I only get the one coat on the wall
we just touch up after it dries
But they did put two coats on. The first coat went on before caulking, and didn't extend all the way to the masking tape (but as close as possible).
Thanks for the video, love your channel, I consider you guys "new school" painters only bc I was taught by my grandpa how to paint the old school way, I tried this technique today it made it faster, however I used a light gray paint and had the halo. Could you please make a video on particular colors or types that don't halo. I've only had halo effect on lighter colors, is this normal? Please let me know. Thanks guys!!! Oklahoma
Love your videos guys, way up in 100 mile house, B.C., Canada.
Thank you for sharing and watching🤙
Great video! Im from Texas💪👍
Thanks for watching Becky!
Thanks for tips guys, from your mate in Tazzy (Tasmania)
Rural Ohio! Thanks for the awesome videos
Hi! Chris a great educational video if you can do one for Painters and DIY. Interior and Exterior Paint Problems and Remedies! Example: peeling paint, chalking, alligatoring, checking, fish eyes.... Always nice to tune in to your Videos great tips and tricks of the trade! Don gooseneck guy!
Good idea! Thanks for sharing Donald!
Hi friends. I'll be painting my remodel bathroom pretty soon. Since I'll be installing crown molding and the ceiling and walls will be different colors, how far I need to go with the paints to the corners? Thank you . Esteban
We do the corners
How much you charge for a room of that size with all materials in the uk i get anywhere between £280-£450 depending on which brand paint the client chooses, I do it in 1-2 days max again depending on filling etc
Love the drone shots in the beginning, which drone do ya'll use?
Mavic Pro
do you have any idea why when I am rolling, if I go over an area, then come back to smooth out a line or get better coverage, the paint begins to smear and almost come off the wall? (like it is not sticking to the wall at all, it gets really messy and is hard to correct)
It has happened with rollers and brushes, and different types of paint.
Am I missing a step or something?
Love all of your vids, new starter over here in the UK :)
What paint are you using?
Is the caulk and tape method necessary for smooth walls? In my area most walls are snooth so there’s no need for this.
Not always necessary
Great video.
Why don't you use primer?
Anyone else wonder how these guys stay so clean
Lol, it is not our job to paint ourselves
Home Improvement TV haha that’s a funny response
If you pull tape before rolling ?. How do you not spatter Paint onto nice clan baseboards.
Use a good roller and paint
Nice one. Paul from Canada
Thanks for watching Paul!
Phx az , thank you paint life 🤪
How well does a paint shield work for cutting baseboard/ceilings?
Works great!