I'm a professional home improvement/remodeling contractor. What I've learned is that every one of us needs a mentor and teacher and you do an awesome job of being that for me, Jeff. I always struggled finishing drywall but I have gotten so much better at it as a result of watching your videos...over and over again. I'm grateful and so are my clients. Thank you!
I'm a mom with a very busy husband and I wanted to learn how to remodel on my own. And I watched so many of your videos and I wanted to give a huge thank you! My walls came out smooth with beautiful corners! It almost looks pro. Thank you for all the time you invest into teaching people what to do and not do!
@@guillegarciadevaquera3612 hahaha, Maybe I had beginners luck? I’m sure you’ll get there! Don’t give up because it’s a great feeling when you accomplish it and you’re happy with it
@@PaintedWindowScreensou're giving me hope lol, I am remodeling part of the garage and enclosure to create a small pet salon. I'm pretty nervous but also excited. The 'pros' my father hired to put in a dividing wall left a floor to ceiling bump that seriously looks awful. And now from watching some of his vids I know why. Makes me wish I could have been the one to do the drywall on that side 😂 but hopefully I can off set that eyesore with decor and storage. I'm learning everything from scratch cuz my family assumes that since I have 'lady parts' I can't use tools >:(
Others have said this, and I will too: this is the best drywall video on UA-cam by the best home renovator on UA-cam. Bookmark this damn thing. Brilliant stuff.
This guy is absolutely remarkable. He doesn't powder coat everything was so much BS that you can't get any real usable information out of it! He keeps it simple he includes tips like painting so that you go with the rays of the Sun I wouldn't even have thought to tell someone such a thing and I been in the drywall business it's just something that I never even thought about! Very very good instructional videos the man has a real talent for teaching! Watch and learn! Excellent job!
I agree. I get that YouTibe creators want to capitalize on their channel, but he is excellent in presenting in a way that is practical and useful. No added crap.
I wish I saw him before I fucked up 80% of my missing my first time. I'm gonna try again on the last bit and feel like it's going to go way better thanks to his tutorial
Was a dry wall helper for a couple of years. My boss was like this quality wise and I learned alot. But this guy is way more personable lol we were so busy it was rush rush rush and any mistake or foibles were punishable with yelling and cranky silence. Even though he knew I knew squat at first. His communication style was machine gun rapid and he hated trying to just show a person.
You are the best DIY teacher on UA-cam. Clear, straightforward, warm natured, on point, and it is clear you know your content. “Thank you” does not get to the bottom of my appreciation-not even close.
Been doing home repairs and small renos for 17 yrs, most contractors hate and avoid drywall work (because they suck at it). I like it... and 95% no issues, this video has shown me the errors in my methods and how to avoid them. Love learning, great presentation. Thanks for all you do.
2 years ago I purchased a home that needed a lot of work. Since that time to now, you've inspired me through countless videos on a wide array of tasks! Your willingness to share your knowledge is extremely commendable. The amount of work you (or someone) has put into creating these videos, the editing, audio, and uploading is quite a task in itself. If there was an award for the international tradesman of the year... you'd certainly have my vote. Thank you from Oklahoma, USA.
I had been installing drywall in my basement over the past few weekends now, as a complete noob. I went through a bunch of your old videos and while they were definitely helpful and enabled me to get the job done, THIS is exactly the type of video I was looking for and would have liked to see. Thanks for uploading this I know it's going to help thousands of people who were in a similar situation as I was. Even now that I've finished my project I'm still enjoying this video and am watching it and learning what little mistakes I did and what I could have done better. Thanks Jeff, helpful as always 👍
I've watched dozens of drywall, tape, and mudding videos and this was definitely the most comprehensive with nothing left out. Actually watched the entire hour and a half+ video without skipping anything and glad I did. Also appreciate the "mess-ups", because us newbies absolutely have them and now see how to actually correct them. Seriously, thank you. Definite subscriber here!
Hi, Jeff! I am a hands-on, love tools, working with my hands, kind a guy. I was in electrical supplies for many years, but as soon as I was out of it, I got my contractor's license to do small jobs. I ended up building custom fireplace mantles, and fireplace stonework, as well as building custom outdoor kitchen islands. I have watched countless videos of yours and have really learned SO much! Thank you for your outstanding videos, and excellent content! You are not only a craftsman, but a wonderful teacher as well! Cheers! Ron Star
You, my friend, did not just make a video, you did a Beginner's Guild to Drywall "MOVIE". Thank you for spending the time to do this. Wow and well done.
Tip 1. The first thing a 1st time DIY drywaller should do before starting a drywall project is get a file and round those sharp edges on the drywall knives to keep from cutting the drywall paper. Tip 2: Have a 2nd bucket with water and run the mixer in the bucked with water that way you clean off much of the compound, then let it sit in the bucket of water so it doesn't dry and gives you time to clean it after finishing the mud job.
When using "hot" mud make sure you clean tools of any heavy deposits (like your mixing tools). If left in a bucket with water the mud will still harden making cleanup a chore. Get your assistant to clean the tools as you work. 😎
The thing that is most confusing to me is what type of mud to use. All these terms that are thrown out, I don’t know what they mean. Taping mud? Is that something I buy in a box called Taping Mud? Then I also get Hot Mud? Joint Compound? Green Lid? Blue Lid? How many boxes, buckets and bags do I need to repair a single wall? How many at the absolute minimum, since I don’t want to purchase six products and only use a handful of each kind?
@@leeb.7188 I'm not an expert, from what I can tell the difference between the different muds is consistency and dry time. Different consistencies can make different steps in the process easier, while different dry times can be useful to finish the project more efficiently (do in 1 day what would usually take 2 or 3 days). As a DIYer you likely do not need to care about these things much. You just want an average mud that will not dry so quickly that you can't fix mistakes. So definitely avoid Hot Mud. Just find something that isn't formulated for a specific task. Also mud and joint compound are synonymous.
@@evancombs5159 : Thanks for the info! Yes, I’m a DIYer fixing up a shabby duplex that I bought. It’s a lot of work and unexpected expenses, but eventually it will be in decent condition so I can rent the units and supplement my retirement income. Thanks for your help!
The best mudding video you will ever find on UA-cam. The priming and reapplying mud to perfect the finish blew my mind. I don't know why because it's basically the same concept as repairing an existing wall. Awesome video.
Please understand this guy is incredibly skilled and makes it look very easy. It definitely is not easy, takes a lot of patience and time to get this good!!
I’m doing my kitchen….I’m a diy type of guy and I’m learning as I go alone…your vids have helped me out alot….I can’t say thank you enough 🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽
I absolutely love this man. He makes everything look easy and therefore not intimidating. He’s an excellent teacher. He knows his skills very well and his explanations just flow as he’s working. I just found him about a month ago and I’m binging on his channel. I’m a female DIYer that wants to get into some woodworking and learning more skills. You don’t need to look anywhere else folks. He will teach you everything you need to know about the home
Am not exactly a noob, but I had picked up some bad habits in my drywall projects. I tried your style in my basement and I got amazing results. No blisters, no extra mud on corners, tapered joints were perfect, it was all amazing. Thanks Jeff for the great tips!!
Far and away the best video on youtube on drywall taping.. You are just the master. I get no bubbles in my tape now after you said wet the top face too. Thanks.
Your channel has gotten me through so much DIY. I didnt want to hire anyone to do something i felt i was able to learn on my own. I literally had no idea how to start, but ive now remodeled one bedroom, floor to ceiling, and im working on my next one now. Your videos make a world of difference!
Super helpful! Thank you so much! I appreciate how much content you cover in one video without all the extra fluff and bloating that many vidoes contain, while still being likeable and fun to watch. Thank you, and well done!
From Peterborough, Ontario. I just built a 24x24x13 garage last summer with my father-in-law. What a learning experience! I finished the insulation, vapor barrier, and drywall in the fall by myself. By procrastinating all winter long, I was able to come across your video and finally have the motivation to get the mudding and taping done. For this I thank you! Thanks for the great video!
I’m a 30 year craftsman. Everything he teaches is legit. Step by step. Nothing extra. If you do what he says my friend you have nailed the project. That goes for all of his videos. I have been watching and learning tricks and he is somehow sharing my tricks lol. Great job Jeff. You will be the guy I share with my clients, friends and family that want to know how to do things.
The first 5 minutes pointed out to me some of the issues I had mudding my old house, then just when I thought you'd answered all my questions, you shared more new knowledge I wish I had then. My new house will be MUCH better. Thanks!
Watched it 3 times and got my new downstairs done and new bathroom downstairs done with no problem's. Thank you for all your videos made my life easier. Mudding, bathroom water proofing, wiring, plumbing etc. All these videos helped me. Thank you again.
I now have the confidence to take on the project I've been so afraid to start. I have a 20x20 building out in the back yard that I want to turn into a pool cabana. Drywall was my biggest fear. ...not anymore. I will post picks when I complete it showing the various steps. THANKS JEFF!!
I wanted to come back to this video and rewatch to make sure I’m doing it right. But, wanted to say my husband and I watched your drywall videos during Covid. It was the only part of our basement remodel we planned to hire out because we didn’t know how to do it well. But Covid. So, we learned from your videos and I wish we could invite you over to see our basement! It’s beautiful!! Thank you!
I haven’t even finished the video yet (about 60% in) and I must say : You’re an amazing teacher and you’ve helped me grow from pathetic to not bad at all in less than a day! Extremely educational how you explain everything 👌 You’re actually funny too so it’s entertaining! Thank you so much!👍
Thanks for this great summary video Jeff. One thing I would love to see as a follow up is to have a complete beginner watch this video, and then give them your tools and film them attempting to do a small project while you mentor them as they work. Being an expert often means you have forgotten what you do automatically - watching a novice (or two) attempt to replicate your process would be great for exposing any "obvious" things that you didn't think to explain or that may be confusing. Plus it would set the bar for realistically what a beginner can expect to achieve.
You are absolutely correct about the “drywall tapers” for commercial and new home builders. Our new build has the crappiest drywall and I have had to learn as a woman to fix all of the mistakes in addition all of my rental properties I had redone all of the drywall myself from watching your videos also with minimal tools and patience. Thanks for all you do and say you are 100% correct !
Jeff. Truly epic video. I watched many but none compare. You have given us everything we need to get to level 4 drywalling. Love the spray foam hack! Thank you!
Thanks for such a comprehensive tutorial. I have DIY drywall before and now I wish I knew what you have shown me. It would have saved me a lot of sanding and I would have been happier with my work. Going forward, thanks to you, when I put in my new side door and take out a closet - I’m going to be confident on these upcoming projects.
Thanks for this video. I am a 71 year old home owner, 4'11, retired nurse and remodeling my living room and enclosing a covered porch to enlarge living room. I am removing a wasteful gas fireplace in a corner, as well. You video is great.
I have loved all your drywall tips and this just brings it all together, thanks. I have managed to get my drywall skills from dangerous to better than whats in my house currently so I am really stoked to keep going with it.
Thanks for not shilling every brand of product and emphasizing the heart of excellent workmanship with sheetrock. Like others have said, this is the best to-the-point training. Thanks 👍
Thanks for the info, basically included all I was looking for in one place, would be super helpful if longer videos can be broken into sections so scrolling/finding it easier. Cheers!
I’m a 23 yr finish carpenter..thank you so much for keeping your inside corner crisp all the way to the floor..hate it when drywall mud gets clumped up at the bottom & the finisher thinks it will be covered with baseboard..either don’t know or don’t care but I have to scrape the dry mud to get corner crisp or my baseboard won’t sit flat on the wall & leaves gaps in my trim..it’s much easier to scrape wet mud than dry..obviously you know this & look out for the finish carpenter so thank you for sharing this with others..
This has to be the best drywall mud and tape instructional video on UA-cam. I remember a video you showed putting mud in the corners with a roller, I showed a buddy and when he finished his basement he used it. This was his first time trying to mud and wasn’t having luck with putting mud on with the knives but the roller worked for him. I came and helped him with the finals and he did a pretty good job for a beginner. I thank you for all the tips, Keep up the great videos.
Awesome videos Jeff. They help me forget my discouragement about tackling home repairs after 20 years in my house, raising kids, divorce, neglecting repairs, & suddenly noticing deferred maintenance. Merci merci beaucoup! You are appreciated! Question: fibafuse: yea or nay?
Well, I moved into my home in 92' after many of the same problems as you had (divorced in '77 , bought my house in '92, reared kids who are now in their 40's, and now my home, which was built in the late 60's, is needing many repairs. I am making the repairs I can myself--the easier stuff. I am now 68 and it is harder to repair drywall and paint. (Arthritis!) I just repaired a wall in my laundry room that had a leak behind it a few years ago. I should have bought all new drywall, but was afraid to spend the money. The joint where the ceiling meets the wall was a total mess. I did not think about the expanding foam. I don't know why, because I did all the cracks near the floor many years ago with it. I got it on my fingers and couldn't get it off and it was horrible!!! It also makes a horrible mess if you are not used to using it!!! Anyway, I didn't want to buy anything, so I used what I had at hand. I even did a small drywall hole in my ceiling with papier mache' made from paper towels and Elmers Glue or a dollar glue from the Dollar Tree. I do not recommend this either, but I am on a fixed income. I even put some Elmer's glue in the mud instead of water, which I also DO NOT recommend. My house is older, and the people who built it were not so particular, so I don't care if my job is PERFECT. Anyway, THANKS so much for the directions on this site!!! The sad story is that my whole copper pipe water system is springing tiny holes and my electric is old and not up to code. Don't think white glue will fix these. LOL. I WILL NOT touch water or electric. So, in addition to thanking Jeff for his videos, I am telling all single Grandmas that you can do SOME things in the house yourself. Just Google it, or You Tube IT!!!
Absolutely the best and most informative video I have seen on UA-cam .This guy's got a real talent for getting to the point . No lost circle back just one more thing moments. Totally nailed it.
The best … the BEST … the VERY BEST tutorial I’ve ever seen for the homeowner DIYer willing to take the time to learn to do it right, with basic tools. You are a great teacher. Thank you!
Many thanks for your amazing videos and teachings Jeff! As always, you are a master! A (potential) tip for anyone who is interested, an old Spanish plaster fixed and removed my bubble issue. Wet the tape before placing it! Run it under a tap or through a bucket if no running water available. I have never had a bubble since, irrelevant if I use pre-mixed or i mix the plaster. Cheers again Jeff, have a great Saturday night!
I watch a couple different DIY home improvement UA-cam teachers because if one channel is not so great, the other ones will probably pick up the slack. But for drywall mud and taping IMO this is probably the best and most thorough with good explanations and demonstrations. Much Appreciated.
My house was flood damaged a year ago. It's been rough but I am finally finishing with drywall repair. I can't thank you enough because your advice is excellent.
Half way through this video, Jeff helped me to realize that taping drywall is not something I'll ever be able to do well no matter how hard I try. I still watched the other half of the video though because Jeff is really enjoyable to watch and easy to understand. He has a way of pulling you into the room with him. When he's anxious or frustrated, you feel anxious and frustrated right along with him. I cracked up when the scene cut to "Day Two". The camera rolled and Jeff said, "OK, it's day two.. I left, you didn't". I couldn't stop watching after that. I wish every teacher could be this animated, precise and detailed simultaneously. I feel like an expert drywall taper after this video. Thank you sir.
I'm from the UK, a keen DIY'er and only come into contact with 'drywall' occasionally. I never really got my head around why filling a joint was such an elaborate process because I never knew the edges WERE ACTUALLY BEVELLED - a veil has been lifted from my eyes! Many Thanks - it's all clear now why you do what you do......
I have watch many videos on different tape and mudding techniques and yours by far is the most simple, most clean and quality. The one thing I think is funny is that in all the videos I've seen no one ever talks about the curve in taping knives.
i might be too late to answer your question on how to know which bucket is stronger than the others. . there are many factors, but to be specific in what you encountered, which is abrasion, it falls down on what plastic resin is used to make the bucket. you can commonly check what resin is used on the bottom of the bucket near on the other symbols like a three arrows making a triangular shape with a number inside of it (it means how many times the plastic had been recycled). the most common used plastic resins to make buckets are PET or PVC. the more durable ones are PP, ABS, or PA. there are a ton of resin type or grade, so at least check on the bucket resin type that you used and take note on what is preferrable on every type of job you are going to work on. I'm a former plastic injection mould designer by the way, so this kind of knowledge is common for me.
I know I just left a comment but as I continue to watch the whole video I just had to leave another one of just how much I love how you explain everything so thoroughly. Even adding drawn diagrams for clarity of understanding. Just great!
We are finishing a large basement so this video is very helpful. Question: We have a few places where joints are 1/2 butt and 1/2 factory finish. What, if anything, should we do differently? Thank you!
For corners i wet down my mud a tad more and use a painting corner roller to apply the mud to the corners before the tape, waaaaaayyyy faster and way less work. Try it out for yourself. Love the content i've learned so much from your channel. Cheers
Here is the answer to your question at 46:37 about the bits of plastic in the mud. This is do to the sharp edges on the mixing paddle chipping the inside of the bucket. If you switch to a paddle with rounded edges, you wont have that issue. Hope that helps.
I watched another video today where the presenter warned about the sharp edges leaving bits of bucket plastic in his mud. He said it was especially apparent when he used the orange or blue big-box buckets.
@@JT_70 Plastic buckets should have a making molded into the plastic. If it has "PP" it should be harder plastic. If it has "PE" or "HDPE" or "MDPE" it will be softer.
Dude that’s funny, I’m in the same boat only 2 days ago lol! I definitely am sanding way more than I should be lol! Hopefully your job turned out good! 👍🏻
@@JR-ho5qm thanks man I got through it but ohhh the lessons learned lol. #1 most important is thin the premixed mud or your wall will look like a badly iced cake 😆
@@sw-wk3qm it’s one of those learned art skills, you definitely can’t become pro of watching videos. I’m in Autobody so there is some crossover and it was still somewhat of a challenge
You are the best. Thank you for your videos. I’ve been renovating my whole place by myself for them last 3 years. You’ve thought me the basics for everything. Electrical. Plumbing. Wood work 👏🏼
I was wondering that too! What mud was used to bed the tape. I’m assuming it was all purpose light weight. Came in a box but in the US we have USG Plus 3…in a bucket with room to add water. At 6:53 I can’t read the whole label of the box but it it yellow and says machine mud.
Thank you for the info you have provided. First time drywall hanging, and finishing. I followed your guide step by step with no sanding needed in-between steps. All my tape turned out as you spoke and I had butt joints and end walls ending into a stucco finish. I ran 4 days letting the mud cure overnight. I am sanding for the first time before my texture which I have never done as well. I am a professional investor full time for over 30 years. I have always had someone else do all these things for me. Just had a jam and needed to get this done asap. Thank you for the excellent guidance.
Literally the only drywall video you need to watch on UA-cam. I have been completely redoing my basement from foundation to paint over the past few months. Your video have helped allot. I will send you some finished photos
Thank you so much my friend from the north. I decided to tackling a new kitchen remodel. Right now I am doing a wall prep after removing a soffit the builder put in to hide an exhaust vent pipe. I added new sheet rock and got it as even as I could, but it is off. I am filling the off area with spackle until it is level to the eye. When I ran the corner bead on the ceiling it was extremely hard to run the spackle as most of it would fall to the floor. I think I had it too runny. Now I see I should have loaded it on a corner of the knife and worked with pressure on the side away from the joint. This is an art and you made it look easy. I am going to hang the cabinets next Wednesday. Thank you my friend!
I absolutely LOVE the way you explain how to do your work. You make so much sense, keep it simple, literally instilling confidence in me. Thank you for sharing your expertise. I appreciate you more than you will ever know.
Lol. I don’t watch those other guys. I always start with your channel unless its a topic without a video. It keeps me from messing up and I don’t have to redo much. Thanks for your channel!!
you rock dude, I come from the trades and have done a lot of things to my home, Now after Hurricane IAN I find myself having to become a Drywall expert or pay a contractor. I Live in Orlando FL and had 4 ft of water surrounding my house. I suffered only 3 inches through out the house. I will be removing all baseboard and 4 to 5 inches of drywall in almost every room, :( You Sir are an Invaluable source, thank you from the bottom of my heart for the detailed explanation of WHY,WHY NOT, and How to do all of drywall from A TO Z. You rock!!!!!!!!!! Mike of Orlando Florida and IAN Casualty.
We're in the process of buying our first home. In our budget, renovation is a must, and i have to say that your channel has been the most informative and well produced. I have some experience, but you do a great job of explaining why things are done a certain way and filling in the gaps of my knowledge. Thank you for being awesome!
Jeff, I’ve told ya on previous videos your channel changed my life. And my standard of living. Thank you again. There’s nothing better than (as a tradesman) to watch another tradesman who can really slap it together. Love watching you work man. Ty again
Really great channel. Just teaching myself about drywall to become a little more proficient and you've covered stuff the hundreds of other channels and tutorials don't cover. I was so impressed I subscribed and I don't really subscribe to hardly any channels. Great stuff, keep up the good work. I'm not a drywall specialist.....yet, even after 20 years of construction and I never even knew about the tapered edges of drywall. The description of filling the well was awesome. I've been afraid of drywall and avoided it like the plague in 20 years of construction. (mostly electrician, plumber, carpenter) but now I feel a lot more confident becoming proficient thanks to your channel.
This is the most intimidating part to me. I have watched several others, because I have never done this before and I am getting ready to do this in a week or so.
I just finished renovating my kitchen (YT video soon) and I learned so much from you!!! I installed tiles, painting cabinets, built a dry wall learning from your videos and now when I got to building an arched doorway I found this video. Would have helped with my small wall I built but some of the tips you gave I did it intuitively. But now, I know the wall would have come up so much better after this video. Thank you for sharing those precious tips to help us, the Purgatory clients 😂. Not professionals but still wanting to do the job ourselves.
Great video. Extremely clear, concise, and honest. And just picking up a hawk instead of using a metal trough has been a game changer for me. Much thanks!!
It was difficult to have the professional tapers return to finish the last (finally emptied) room of my basement project so I decided to do it myself. Watching Jeff explain the process step by step in DIY language in this Beginner's Guide to Drywall Taping video, with his many dos, don'ts and simple hints gave me the courage to get started. It is so confidence building to have the process so well explained that I'm now eager to get started. Thank you Jeff!
Good morning. Mr Jeff. I have been watching you for years now. and I never got tired of watching you. It's 2:21 am . and I am watching .you since 10 :PM. Thank for your good work
Just wanna say, if you're not searching homerenovision [insert topic here] for any and all renovation edu, you're wasting time! This guy is the best on youtube. Not even close.
Unbelievable! Came across your video and had to watch because it’s been awhile since I’ve done this. You, sir, continue a lost art. My Dad worked for US Gypsum through the 1950’s, 60’s and 70’s. He retired with many accolades as Chief Tester of all materials they produced. I have to say he was never satisfied that it wasn’t perfect. He used both the board and the compound in the little tract home I grew up in. A finished basement. A bathroom and kitchen remodel. Always done with pride in his work and his home. There was never a flaw in his work. As a little girl I didn’t pay much attention to it until years later when I was married and we owned our first home. I asked him for advice when we began some remodeling and that was the beginning of a lifelong lesson. He taught me everything. I was never as good at it as he was, of course. He has long since passed, but as I watched your video, every single detail you explain is exactly how I was taught. Perfection! It made me smile and I believe he was smiling too! Thank you, thank you, thank you!!
I’m retired from painting and drywall, this is the only man on YT that has not taught me anything. He’s also the only man UA-cam it knows his shit. He is a bad ass. It would be a wonderful pleasure to work with this guy.
This man Jeff, is the absolute best teacher of all the voutubers. I did my first California patch, thanks to him and I opted to forgo a contractor who wanted to charge me $1700 to replace an 8’x4’ section of my ceiling that was damaged by the upstairs bathroom. My wife and I hung the sheet and of course the tapping and muddying was all mine. I wouldn’t have done this had I not viewed all of Jeff’s videos.
Watch next: Easy Drywall Tricks to Fix Any Mistake: ua-cam.com/video/BUcT5LHmA7w/v-deo.html Cheers!
How about a video on cutting odd shapes for drywall install. Example, underneath stairs.
thank you
⁴😊@@amgj74
OUTSTANDING!!! GREAT !!GOOD TEACHER!!+
please add the timestamps for easy reference as this video is a goldmine. thanks
I'm a professional home improvement/remodeling contractor. What I've learned is that every one of us needs a mentor and teacher and you do an awesome job of being that for me, Jeff. I always struggled finishing drywall but I have gotten so much better at it as a result of watching your videos...over and over again. I'm grateful and so are my clients. Thank you!
I'm a mom with a very busy husband and I wanted to learn how to remodel on my own. And I watched so many of your videos and I wanted to give a huge thank you! My walls came out smooth with beautiful corners! It almost looks pro. Thank you for all the time you invest into teaching people what to do and not do!
Well done. 👏👏
👏👏👏👏👏
I’m so jealous! Mine looked like you were inside of a cave, mud was so thick 🙈 but I’m not giving up! I will keep trying
@@guillegarciadevaquera3612 hahaha, Maybe I had beginners luck? I’m sure you’ll get there! Don’t give up because it’s a great feeling when you accomplish it and you’re happy with it
@@PaintedWindowScreensou're giving me hope lol, I am remodeling part of the garage and enclosure to create a small pet salon. I'm pretty nervous but also excited. The 'pros' my father hired to put in a dividing wall left a floor to ceiling bump that seriously looks awful. And now from watching some of his vids I know why. Makes me wish I could have been the one to do the drywall on that side 😂 but hopefully I can off set that eyesore with decor and storage.
I'm learning everything from scratch cuz my family assumes that since I have 'lady parts' I can't use tools >:(
9:12 horizontal join
17:08 ceiling to wall join
25:57 inside corner
36:57 outside corner
49:20 second coat inside corner
57:08 second coat horizontal
59:01 second coat vertical butt join
1:03:14 second coat outside corner
1:11:51 second coat wall/ceiling join
Legend 👍 thank you
👍
You da real mvp
what sandpaper do you use afterwards to rub it down?
@CB BC
Yes, but you might need to go back to something and you'll be grateful to have this index.
Others have said this, and I will too: this is the best drywall video on UA-cam by the best home renovator on UA-cam. Bookmark this damn thing. Brilliant stuff.
Cheers Ben!
This guy is absolutely remarkable. He doesn't powder coat everything was so much BS that you can't get any real usable information out of it! He keeps it simple he includes tips like painting so that you go with the rays of the Sun I wouldn't even have thought to tell someone such a thing and I been in the drywall business it's just something that I never even thought about! Very very good instructional videos the man has a real talent for teaching! Watch and learn! Excellent job!
You mean "sugar coat" ? 😁
And yeah, you're right, his delivery is refreshing
I agree. I get that YouTibe creators want to capitalize on their channel, but he is excellent in presenting in a way that is practical and useful. No added crap.
I wish I saw him before I fucked up 80% of my missing my first time. I'm gonna try again on the last bit and feel like it's going to go way better thanks to his tutorial
Yeah true I didn’t see him powder coat anything either 😂
Was a dry wall helper for a couple of years. My boss was like this quality wise and I learned alot. But this guy is way more personable lol we were so busy it was rush rush rush and any mistake or foibles were punishable with yelling and cranky silence. Even though he knew I knew squat at first. His communication style was machine gun rapid and he hated trying to just show a person.
You are the best DIY teacher on UA-cam. Clear, straightforward, warm natured, on point, and it is clear you know your content. “Thank you” does not get to the bottom of my appreciation-not even close.
Been doing home repairs and small renos for 17 yrs, most contractors hate and avoid drywall work (because they suck at it). I like it... and 95% no issues, this video has shown me the errors in my methods and how to avoid them. Love learning, great presentation. Thanks for all you do.
2 years ago I purchased a home that needed a lot of work. Since that time to now, you've inspired me through countless videos on a wide array of tasks! Your willingness to share your knowledge is extremely commendable.
The amount of work you (or someone) has put into creating these videos, the editing, audio, and uploading is quite a task in itself. If there was an award for the international tradesman of the year... you'd certainly have my vote. Thank you from Oklahoma, USA.
I had been installing drywall in my basement over the past few weekends now, as a complete noob. I went through a bunch of your old videos and while they were definitely helpful and enabled me to get the job done, THIS is exactly the type of video I was looking for and would have liked to see. Thanks for uploading this I know it's going to help thousands of people who were in a similar situation as I was. Even now that I've finished my project I'm still enjoying this video and am watching it and learning what little mistakes I did and what I could have done better. Thanks Jeff, helpful as always 👍
Cheers Phil!
@@HomeRenoVisionDIY you're the best bro
Thank you sir!
I've watched dozens of drywall, tape, and mudding videos and this was definitely the most comprehensive with nothing left out. Actually watched the entire hour and a half+ video without skipping anything and glad I did. Also appreciate the "mess-ups", because us newbies absolutely have them and now see how to actually correct them. Seriously, thank you. Definite subscriber here!
Hi, Jeff! I am a hands-on, love tools, working with my hands, kind a guy. I was in electrical supplies for many years, but as soon as I was out of it, I got my contractor's license to do small jobs. I ended up building custom fireplace mantles, and fireplace stonework, as well as building custom outdoor kitchen islands. I have watched countless videos of yours and have really learned SO much! Thank you for your outstanding videos, and excellent content! You are not only a craftsman, but a wonderful teacher as well! Cheers! Ron Star
You, my friend, did not just make a video, you did a Beginner's Guild to Drywall "MOVIE". Thank you for spending the time to do this. Wow and well done.
Tip 1. The first thing a 1st time DIY drywaller should do before starting a drywall project is get a file and round those sharp edges on the drywall knives to keep from cutting the drywall paper.
Tip 2: Have a 2nd bucket with water and run the mixer in the bucked with water that way you clean off much of the compound, then let it sit in the bucket of water so it doesn't dry and gives you time to clean it after finishing the mud job.
Thanks good information
When using "hot" mud make sure you clean tools of any heavy deposits (like your mixing tools). If left in a bucket with water the mud will still harden making cleanup a chore.
Get your assistant to clean the tools as you work. 😎
The thing that is most confusing to me is what type of mud to use. All these terms that are thrown out, I don’t know what they mean. Taping mud? Is that something I buy in a box called Taping Mud? Then I also get Hot Mud? Joint Compound? Green Lid? Blue Lid? How many boxes, buckets and bags do I need to repair a single wall? How many at the absolute minimum, since I don’t want to purchase six products and only use a handful of each kind?
@@leeb.7188 I'm not an expert, from what I can tell the difference between the different muds is consistency and dry time. Different consistencies can make different steps in the process easier, while different dry times can be useful to finish the project more efficiently (do in 1 day what would usually take 2 or 3 days). As a DIYer you likely do not need to care about these things much. You just want an average mud that will not dry so quickly that you can't fix mistakes. So definitely avoid Hot Mud. Just find something that isn't formulated for a specific task.
Also mud and joint compound are synonymous.
@@evancombs5159 : Thanks for the info! Yes, I’m a DIYer fixing up a shabby duplex that I bought. It’s a lot of work and unexpected expenses, but eventually it will be in decent condition so I can rent the units and supplement my retirement income. Thanks for your help!
The best mudding video you will ever find on UA-cam. The priming and reapplying mud to perfect the finish blew my mind. I don't know why because it's basically the same concept as repairing an existing wall. Awesome video.
Please understand this guy is incredibly skilled and makes it look very easy. It definitely is not easy, takes a lot of patience and time to get this good!!
Agree
I keep realizing that with each project
Also understand this guy is a PHENOMENAL contractor. You will struggle to find a contractor with his knowledge or skills.
Amen to this. I mean, never dropping any mud on the floor? My floor looks like the floor of a pigeon coop!
I’m doing my kitchen….I’m a diy type of guy and I’m learning as I go alone…your vids have helped me out alot….I can’t say thank you enough 🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽
I absolutely love this man. He makes everything look easy and therefore not intimidating. He’s an excellent teacher. He knows his skills very well and his explanations just flow as he’s working. I just found him about a month ago and I’m binging on his channel. I’m a female DIYer that wants to get into some woodworking and learning more skills. You don’t need to look anywhere else folks. He will teach you everything you need to know about the home
Am not exactly a noob, but I had picked up some bad habits in my drywall projects. I tried your style in my basement and I got amazing results. No blisters, no extra mud on corners, tapered joints were perfect, it was all amazing. Thanks Jeff for the great tips!!
Far and away the best video on youtube on drywall taping.. You are just the master. I get no bubbles in my tape now after you said wet the top face too. Thanks.
Your channel has gotten me through so much DIY. I didnt want to hire anyone to do something i felt i was able to learn on my own. I literally had no idea how to start, but ive now remodeled one bedroom, floor to ceiling, and im working on my next one now. Your videos make a world of difference!
Super helpful! Thank you so much! I appreciate how much content you cover in one video without all the extra fluff and bloating that many vidoes contain, while still being likeable and fun to watch. Thank you, and well done!
From Peterborough, Ontario. I just built a 24x24x13 garage last summer with my father-in-law. What a learning experience! I finished the insulation, vapor barrier, and drywall in the fall by myself. By procrastinating all winter long, I was able to come across your video and finally have the motivation to get the mudding and taping done. For this I thank you! Thanks for the great video!
Make sure to tell the wife how procrastination pays off. They sometimes get it in their heads that it's a bad thing.
I’m a 30 year craftsman. Everything he teaches is legit. Step by step. Nothing extra. If you do what he says my friend you have nailed the project. That goes for all of his videos. I have been watching and learning tricks and he is somehow sharing my tricks lol. Great job Jeff. You will be the guy I share with my clients, friends and family that want to know how to do things.
Really appreciate that. Thank you.
Big percentage of the home owners are renovating themselves because of people like Jeff, who likes to share their knowledge and wisdom.
The first 5 minutes pointed out to me some of the issues I had mudding my old house, then just when I thought you'd answered all my questions, you shared more new knowledge I wish I had then. My new house will be MUCH better. Thanks!
You can add a pinch of red or blue chalk to the mud when you mix it to differentiate between coats.
You are truly a professional. Down here in Texas people like you no longer exist. Wish we had people like you around here.
I can’t tell you how many times I come back to your videos year after year as refresher training. Thank you!
Watched it 3 times and got my new downstairs done and new bathroom downstairs done with no problem's. Thank you for all your videos made my life easier. Mudding, bathroom water proofing, wiring, plumbing etc. All these videos helped me. Thank you again.
Happy to help! Cheers
I now have the confidence to take on the project I've been so afraid to start. I have a 20x20 building out in the back yard that I want to turn into a pool cabana. Drywall was my biggest fear. ...not anymore. I will post picks when I complete it showing the various steps. THANKS JEFF!!
I wanted to come back to this video and rewatch to make sure I’m doing it right. But, wanted to say my husband and I watched your drywall videos during Covid. It was the only part of our basement remodel we planned to hire out because we didn’t know how to do it well. But Covid. So, we learned from your videos and I wish we could invite you over to see our basement! It’s beautiful!! Thank you!
I haven’t even finished the video yet (about 60% in) and I must say : You’re an amazing teacher and you’ve helped me grow from pathetic to not bad at all in less than a day!
Extremely educational how you explain everything 👌 You’re actually funny too so it’s entertaining! Thank you so much!👍
In 20years as a homeowner, this video and profeSsional is the Best Ive ever watched. Such a practical and thorough profeSsionaL🤩
Thanks for this great summary video Jeff. One thing I would love to see as a follow up is to have a complete beginner watch this video, and then give them your tools and film them attempting to do a small project while you mentor them as they work. Being an expert often means you have forgotten what you do automatically - watching a novice (or two) attempt to replicate your process would be great for exposing any "obvious" things that you didn't think to explain or that may be confusing. Plus it would set the bar for realistically what a beginner can expect to achieve.
You are absolutely correct about the “drywall tapers” for commercial and new home builders. Our new build has the crappiest drywall and I have had to learn as a woman to fix all of the mistakes in addition all of my rental properties I had redone all of the drywall myself from watching your videos also with minimal tools and patience. Thanks for all you do and say you are 100% correct !
Jeff. Truly epic video. I watched many but none compare. You have given us everything we need to get to level 4 drywalling. Love the spray foam hack! Thank you!
THE most thorough and pragmatic vid on this topic. This guy has superlative pedagogy. I have complete faith in myself after watching this.
Thanks for such a comprehensive tutorial. I have DIY drywall before and now I wish I knew what you have shown me. It would have saved me a lot of sanding and I would have been happier with my work. Going forward, thanks to you, when I put in my new side door and take out a closet - I’m going to be confident on these upcoming projects.
Thanks for this video. I am a 71 year old home owner, 4'11, retired nurse and remodeling my living room and enclosing a covered porch to enlarge living room. I am removing a wasteful gas fireplace in a corner, as well. You video is great.
I have loved all your drywall tips and this just brings it all together, thanks. I have managed to get my drywall skills from dangerous to better than whats in my house currently so I am really stoked to keep going with it.
That right there my friend is the name of the game. I will echo your statement for myself. Encouragement is key in this.
Cheers Alex, never stop learning!
Dang good job bro
Thanks for not shilling every brand of product and emphasizing the heart of excellent workmanship with sheetrock. Like others have said, this is the best to-the-point training. Thanks 👍
It's kinda ironic that you chose to call drywall by a specific brand (Sheetrock) in a comment praising Jeff for not shilling brands....
Thanks for the info, basically included all I was looking for in one place, would be super helpful if longer videos can be broken into sections so scrolling/finding it easier. Cheers!
great point. I will add some chapters for better reference.
Thank God for people like you who dispense knowledge that can change our lives in a positive way!
"If you have a groove, you have a problem. If you have a ridge, just sand it off."
It took me way too long to learn that. Thanks, Jeff!
some things we learn the hard way Aleks. Cheers!
I’m a 23 yr finish carpenter..thank you so much for keeping your inside corner crisp all the way to the floor..hate it when drywall mud gets clumped up at the bottom & the finisher thinks it will be covered with baseboard..either don’t know or don’t care but I have to scrape the dry mud to get corner crisp or my baseboard won’t sit flat on the wall & leaves gaps in my trim..it’s much easier to scrape wet mud than dry..obviously you know this & look out for the finish carpenter so thank you for sharing this with others..
This has to be the best drywall mud and tape instructional video on UA-cam. I remember a video you showed putting mud in the corners with a roller, I showed a buddy and when he finished his basement he used it. This was his first time trying to mud and wasn’t having luck with putting mud on with the knives but the roller worked for him. I came and helped him with the finals and he did a pretty good job for a beginner. I thank you for all the tips, Keep up the great videos.
Awesome videos Jeff. They help me forget my discouragement about tackling home repairs after 20 years in my house, raising kids, divorce, neglecting repairs, & suddenly noticing deferred maintenance. Merci merci beaucoup! You are appreciated! Question: fibafuse: yea or nay?
Well, I moved into my home in 92' after many of the same problems as you had (divorced in '77 , bought my house in '92, reared kids who are now in their 40's, and now my home, which was built in the late 60's, is needing many repairs. I am making the repairs I can myself--the easier stuff. I am now 68 and it is harder to repair drywall and paint. (Arthritis!) I just repaired a wall in my laundry room that had a leak behind it a few years ago. I should have bought all new drywall, but was afraid to spend the money. The joint where the ceiling meets the wall was a total mess. I did not think about the expanding foam. I don't know why, because I did all the cracks near the floor many years ago with it. I got it on my fingers and couldn't get it off and it was horrible!!! It also makes a horrible mess if you are not used to using it!!! Anyway, I didn't want to buy anything, so I used what I had at hand. I even did a small drywall hole in my ceiling with papier mache' made from paper towels and Elmers Glue or a dollar glue from the Dollar Tree. I do not recommend this either, but I am on a fixed income. I even put some Elmer's glue in the mud instead of water, which I also DO NOT recommend. My house is older, and the people who built it were not so particular, so I don't care if my job is PERFECT. Anyway, THANKS so much for the directions on this site!!! The sad story is that my whole copper pipe water system is springing tiny holes and my electric is old and not up to code. Don't think white glue will fix these. LOL. I WILL NOT touch water or electric. So, in addition to thanking Jeff for his videos, I am telling all single Grandmas that you can do SOME things in the house yourself. Just Google it, or You Tube IT!!!
Absolutely the best and most informative video I have seen on UA-cam .This guy's got a real talent for getting to the point . No lost circle back just one more thing moments. Totally nailed it.
Awesome video! I wish it was as easy as you make it look. 🙂
The best … the BEST … the VERY BEST tutorial I’ve ever seen for the homeowner DIYer willing to take the time to learn to do it right, with basic tools. You are a great teacher. Thank you!
Many thanks for your amazing videos and teachings Jeff!
As always, you are a master!
A (potential) tip for anyone who is interested, an old Spanish plaster fixed and removed my bubble issue.
Wet the tape before placing it! Run it under a tap or through a bucket if no running water available.
I have never had a bubble since, irrelevant if I use pre-mixed or i mix the plaster.
Cheers again Jeff, have a great Saturday night!
cheers Mike.
I watch a couple different DIY home improvement UA-cam teachers because if one channel is not so great, the other ones will probably pick up the slack. But for drywall mud and taping IMO this is probably the best and most thorough with good explanations and demonstrations. Much Appreciated.
As a professional finisher, I have to say that I am impressed that you're not covered in mud from head to toe...lol.
My house was flood damaged a year ago. It's been rough but I am finally finishing with drywall repair. I can't thank you enough because your advice is excellent.
The mixing paddle you are using has sharp edges that knick the bucket as you mix. I'd suggest using a mixing attachment with rounded edges.
Ha I had a paddle catch my hair and beat the shit out of me. But you have to be pretty aggressive to get hitchhikers while mixing a bucket
Jeff, I'm telling you! You're the best DIY teacher I've ever seen on you tube!
This video got me feeling really confident to tackle a wall in my basement 😃
Less is more ❤️🔥
This is "THE WAY" to do this soooo well and perfect
Thank you so much !!!!!
Cheers Pierre!
Half way through this video, Jeff helped me to realize that taping drywall is not something I'll ever be able to do well no matter how hard I try. I still watched the other half of the video though because Jeff is really enjoyable to watch and easy to understand.
He has a way of pulling you into the room with him. When he's anxious or frustrated, you feel anxious and frustrated right along with him. I cracked up when the scene cut to "Day Two". The camera rolled and Jeff said, "OK, it's day two.. I left, you didn't". I couldn't stop watching after that.
I wish every teacher could be this animated, precise and detailed simultaneously. I feel like an expert drywall taper after this video. Thank you sir.
Thank you so much for this. My last taping job looked like I had gotten into a fight with the mud.
That is how we all got started.
😂
I'm from the UK, a keen DIY'er and only come into contact with 'drywall' occasionally. I never really got my head around why filling a joint was such an elaborate process because I never knew the edges WERE ACTUALLY BEVELLED - a veil has been lifted from my eyes! Many Thanks - it's all clear now why you do what you do......
I opened my own contracting company off these videos
How’s that going
Same
I have watch many videos on different tape and mudding techniques and yours by far is the most simple, most clean and quality. The one thing I think is funny is that in all the videos I've seen no one ever talks about the curve in taping knives.
i might be too late to answer your question on how to know which bucket is stronger than the others. . there are many factors, but to be specific in what you encountered, which is abrasion, it falls down on what plastic resin is used to make the bucket. you can commonly check what resin is used on the bottom of the bucket near on the other symbols like a three arrows making a triangular shape with a number inside of it (it means how many times the plastic had been recycled). the most common used plastic resins to make buckets are PET or PVC. the more durable ones are PP, ABS, or PA. there are a ton of resin type or grade, so at least check on the bucket resin type that you used and take note on what is preferrable on every type of job you are going to work on.
I'm a former plastic injection mould designer by the way, so this kind of knowledge is common for me.
Most are HDPE
Wrong. The number indicates the type of plastic, not the number of times it was recycled.
I know I just left a comment but as I continue to watch the whole video I just had to leave another one of just how much I love how you explain everything so thoroughly. Even adding drawn diagrams for clarity of understanding. Just great!
We are finishing a large basement so this video is very helpful. Question: We have a few places where joints are 1/2 butt and 1/2 factory finish. What, if anything, should we do differently? Thank you!
Float out a larger distance or shim out the studs on the side of the seams
Pre-fill the tapered side/factory finish before taping
For corners i wet down my mud a tad more and use a painting corner roller to apply the mud to the corners before the tape, waaaaaayyyy faster and way less work. Try it out for yourself. Love the content i've learned so much from your channel. Cheers
Here is the answer to your question at 46:37 about the bits of plastic in the mud. This is do to the sharp edges on the mixing paddle chipping the inside of the bucket. If you switch to a paddle with rounded edges, you wont have that issue. Hope that helps.
I watched another video today where the presenter warned about the sharp edges leaving bits of bucket plastic in his mud. He said it was especially apparent when he used the orange or blue big-box buckets.
@@JT_70 Plastic buckets should have a making molded into the plastic. If it has "PP" it should be harder plastic. If it has "PE" or "HDPE" or "MDPE" it will be softer.
I really wish I’d watched this 3 days ago…
Dude that’s funny, I’m in the same boat only 2 days ago lol! I definitely am sanding way more than I should be lol! Hopefully your job turned out good! 👍🏻
Seriously
@@JR-ho5qm thanks man I got through it but ohhh the lessons learned lol. #1 most important is thin the premixed mud or your wall will look like a badly iced cake 😆
Well I watched videos for two weeks and still can't get it smooth, so I'll have to sand some.
@@sw-wk3qm it’s one of those learned art skills, you definitely can’t become pro of watching videos. I’m in Autobody so there is some crossover and it was still somewhat of a challenge
You are the best. Thank you for your videos. I’ve been renovating my whole place by myself for them last 3 years. You’ve thought me the basics for everything. Electrical. Plumbing. Wood work 👏🏼
For your premixed mud that you added 500ml of water to, what was the quantity of mud and is it just general purpose? Thanks
I was wondering that too! What mud was used to bed the tape. I’m assuming it was all purpose light weight. Came in a box but in the US we have USG Plus 3…in a bucket with room to add water.
At 6:53 I can’t read the whole label of the box but it it yellow and says machine mud.
This guy is THE best at explaning things to the homeowners level. Great personality too
You are number 1 drywall tape & compound filling up down pressure person. Very very nice explained. I like very much.
Thank you for the info you have provided. First time drywall hanging, and finishing. I followed your guide step by step with no sanding needed in-between steps. All my tape turned out as you spoke and I had butt joints and end walls ending into a stucco finish. I ran 4 days letting the mud cure overnight. I am sanding for the first time before my texture which I have never done as well. I am a professional investor full time for over 30 years. I have always had someone else do all these things for me. Just had a jam and needed to get this done asap. Thank you for the excellent guidance.
Jeff makes drywalls look godly and clean, so satisfying to watch the work
Cheers!
Literally the only drywall video you need to watch on UA-cam. I have been completely redoing my basement from foundation to paint over the past few months. Your video have helped allot. I will send you some finished photos
Thank you so much my friend from the north. I decided to tackling a new kitchen remodel. Right now I am doing a wall prep after removing a soffit the builder put in to hide an exhaust vent pipe. I added new sheet rock and got it as even as I could, but it is off. I am filling the off area with spackle until it is level to the eye. When I ran the corner bead on the ceiling it was extremely hard to run the spackle as most of it would fall to the floor. I think I had it too runny. Now I see I should have loaded it on a corner of the knife and worked with pressure on the side away from the joint. This is an art and you made it look easy. I am going to hang the cabinets next Wednesday. Thank you my friend!
I absolutely LOVE the way you explain how to do your work.
You make so much sense, keep it simple, literally instilling confidence in me.
Thank you for sharing your expertise.
I appreciate you more than you will ever know.
Lol. I don’t watch those other guys. I always start with your channel unless its a topic without a video. It keeps me from messing up and I don’t have to redo much. Thanks for your channel!!
you rock dude,
I come from the trades and have done a lot of things to my home, Now after Hurricane IAN I find myself having to become a Drywall expert or pay a contractor.
I Live in Orlando FL and had 4 ft of water surrounding my house. I suffered only 3 inches through out the house. I will be removing all baseboard and 4 to 5 inches of drywall in almost every room, :( You Sir are an Invaluable source, thank you from the bottom of my heart for the detailed explanation of WHY,WHY NOT, and How to do all of drywall from A TO Z.
You rock!!!!!!!!!!
Mike of Orlando Florida and IAN Casualty.
We're in the process of buying our first home. In our budget, renovation is a must, and i have to say that your channel has been the most informative and well produced.
I have some experience, but you do a great job of explaining why things are done a certain way and filling in the gaps of my knowledge.
Thank you for being awesome!
Jeff, I’ve told ya on previous videos your channel changed my life. And my standard of living. Thank you again. There’s nothing better than (as a tradesman) to watch another tradesman who can really slap it together. Love watching you work man. Ty again
I have Ben watching you for months,you are amazing!you give courage to start my job.
This is the definitive video on how to tape drywall. Great information from start to finish. Thank you for helping me improve my home.
Really great channel. Just teaching myself about drywall to become a little more proficient and you've covered stuff the hundreds of other channels and tutorials don't cover. I was so impressed I subscribed and I don't really subscribe to hardly any channels. Great stuff, keep up the good work. I'm not a drywall specialist.....yet, even after 20 years of construction and I never even knew about the tapered edges of drywall. The description of filling the well was awesome. I've been afraid of drywall and avoided it like the plague in 20 years of construction. (mostly electrician, plumber, carpenter) but now I feel a lot more confident becoming proficient thanks to your channel.
Love your videos! No deviations! Bloody good! Highest value on media teaching!
This is the most intimidating part to me. I have watched several others, because I have never done this before and I am getting ready to do this in a week or so.
I just finished renovating my kitchen (YT video soon) and I learned so much from you!!! I installed tiles, painting cabinets, built a dry wall learning from your videos and now when I got to building an arched doorway I found this video. Would have helped with my small wall I built but some of the tips you gave I did it intuitively. But now, I know the wall would have come up so much better after this video. Thank you for sharing those precious tips to help us, the Purgatory clients 😂. Not professionals but still wanting to do the job ourselves.
Geez, I'm not even working on a drywall project and have no immediate plans to... but I watched this whole video and learned SO MUCH! 👍👍👍
Great video. Extremely clear, concise, and honest. And just picking up a hawk instead of using a metal trough has been a game changer for me. Much thanks!!
It was difficult to have the professional tapers return to finish the last (finally emptied) room of my basement project so I decided to do it myself. Watching Jeff explain the process step by step in DIY language in this Beginner's Guide to Drywall Taping video, with his many dos, don'ts and simple hints gave me the courage to get started. It is so confidence building to have the process so well explained that I'm now eager to get started. Thank you Jeff!
Good morning. Mr Jeff. I have been watching you for years now. and I never got tired of watching you. It's 2:21 am . and I am watching .you since 10 :PM. Thank for your good work
Just wanna say, if you're not searching homerenovision [insert topic here] for any and all renovation edu, you're wasting time! This guy is the best on youtube. Not even close.
I owe you something man. Thank you for being so thorough sir
The most complete instruction from a real professional/professor
Cheers happy to be of help!
Unbelievable! Came across your video and had to watch because it’s been awhile since I’ve done this. You, sir, continue a lost art. My Dad worked for US Gypsum through the 1950’s, 60’s and 70’s. He retired with many accolades as Chief Tester of all materials they produced. I have to say he was never satisfied that it wasn’t perfect. He used both the board and the compound in the little tract home I grew up in. A finished basement. A bathroom and kitchen remodel. Always done with pride in his work and his home. There was never a flaw in his work. As a little girl I didn’t pay much attention to it until years later when I was married and we owned our first home. I asked him for advice when we began some remodeling and that was the beginning of a lifelong lesson. He taught me everything. I was never as good at it as he was, of course. He has long since passed, but as I watched your video, every single detail you explain is exactly how I was taught. Perfection! It made me smile and I believe he was smiling too! Thank you, thank you, thank you!!
I’m retired from painting and drywall, this is the only man on YT that has not taught me anything. He’s also the only man UA-cam it knows his shit. He is a bad ass. It would be a wonderful pleasure to work with this guy.
One of the best if not the best videos I have ever seen on mudding Dry Wall so many things I hadn't considered thank you, sir, I appreciate you
This man Jeff, is the absolute best teacher of all the voutubers. I did my first California patch, thanks to him and I opted to forgo a contractor who wanted to charge me $1700 to replace an 8’x4’ section of my ceiling that was damaged by the upstairs bathroom. My wife and I hung the sheet and of course the tapping and muddying was all mine. I wouldn’t have done this had I not viewed all of Jeff’s videos.
Okay. I have to admit. This is by far the best taping video I have ever seen.