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jpbluesky Posted - Aug 12 2007 : 12:01:21 PM
I have 22 year old wallpaper in my kitchen - I actually kind of still like it - it is country and cozy - but it is looking very dated. It is stuck very tight with no peeling or wrinkles. Have any of you ever painted over wallpaper? I hear they have special primer for that now. What do you think?

Psalm 51: 10-13
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jpbluesky Posted - Aug 13 2007 : 05:26:22 AM
Well, seeing the professional opinions here has told me what I thought was the case - the wallpaper has to go when we get ready to paint. DH and I removed wallpaper from our two baths, but they had both been steamed a lot over the years from showers and so it was not too difficult. We used the spray and scrapers on them. There is sheetrock beneath the paper. We primed and painted that same type surface in our bath a couple of years ago, and it has stayed nice. Looks kind of neat actually, very smooth and yet a little rustic.

A friend of mine told me she had painted over her paper, using a special primer for it. I was hoping for the easy way out! :)

Psalm 51: 10-13
Aunt Jenny Posted - Aug 12 2007 : 9:48:14 PM
I am glad this topic came up..I have wallpaper over plaster in our bedroom that I have been considering painting over...but I will wait to see what Jeannie finds out. Sounds like it may not be as good an idea as I thought.

Jenny in Utah
Inside me there is a skinny woman crying to get out...but I can usually shut her up with cookies
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MsCwick Posted - Aug 12 2007 : 7:52:44 PM
You can get stripper that you mizx with water and spray on. It's really not that hard to remove wallpaper(we do this in our painting business all the time) You should get the scoring tool though it will work much better. What is the wall underneath? Plaster or sheetrock?
Good luck
quilt8305 Posted - Aug 12 2007 : 6:50:35 PM
Try spraying it with hot water and if it doesn't soften and come off it may be OK. When we took off our wall paper that is how we did it...........sprayed it and scraped off the soft paper.

Mary

Peace cannot be kept by force. It can only be achieved by understanding. Albert Einstein
mikesgirl Posted - Aug 12 2007 : 6:39:59 PM
I used to have a wallpapering business with another gal named Shari. (Sheri's Wallpapering, obviously) and if someone asked us to do that (we did wall prep and a little painting too) we always refused. It's just like Alee said - it can look like it's the tightest, smoothest finish in the world, but that paint gets on there and the seams could lift, and it could bubble. Also, you can ALWAYS see the seams if you try to paint over it. You could cover it with felt paper (it's a wallpaper underliner to put over bad walls to give you a smooth surface.) But if you do that, make sure you run spackle into the seams of the felt paper, even if it doesn't look like you have any gaps) and sand it. Then prime it before you paint it, because it will suck the paint up like crazy. Another option is to remove the old paper and use one of the new papers that look like a painted wall if you want a plainer look. Some of them look kind of marbely or sponge painted. I can problem help problem solve anything you might run into because we've seen it all.
Alee Posted - Aug 12 2007 : 2:48:20 PM
Personally it sounds like disaster waiting to happen. The moisture from the paint might be just what that wall paper needs to release, and it would be so sad if you spent all that time priming and painting only to start getting wrinkles, warps, and peeling in a little while or even a few years.

But I have never tried it so maybe it would work. Maybe your local hardware/home improvement store would have some tips?

Alee
The amazing one handed typist! One hand for typing, one hand to hold Nora!
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