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Wallpaper
Hanging Tips
- Always paste pre-pasted papers, using a thinned solution of pre-mixed
clear paste. (Do not submerge paper into water as suggested by manufacturer).
Add about 1/2 cup of ammonia to each gallon of diluted pre-mixed paste.
Paste paper on a table, never submerge; keep face of paper clean. Keep
a sponge and clean water near your work. Wipe down periodically while
working; use seam roller if needed.
- Add color to your size or primer to match the background color of
your paper. Especially do this when working with darker wall coverings.
- Always keep water soluble colored pencils or tubes of acrylic colors
handy. These can be very helpful for hiding questionable seam tears.
Moisten a cloth with the color you need, and wipe this color into a
seam or tear. With practice this can become very effective.
- If you need a quick new sharp edge on your blade, push the edge of
your blade into the top of your wooden step ladder, bend the blade until
the blade snaps. You now have a new sharp edge to make that quick cut.
This is handy when you don't feel like climbing down from a ladder just
to change the blade for that instant. (Remember to remove the piece
of broken blade from your ladder later).
- When applying pre-pasted borders over any paper, pre-pasted or otherwise,
always paste border with a diluted mixture of Vinyl to Vinyl paste.
Never rely on the pre-pasted surface of the border.
- Place paper on the wall as close to the match as possible; don't rely
on being able to slide the paper to the match; always butt seams. Sliding
the paper removes glue from the seams. If your paper slides too easily,
your paste is to thick. If your paper doesn't slide at all, your paste
is to thin or your application is too sparse.
- For hand printed wallpapers, clay based pastes work best. Keep surface
of paper as clean as possible before applying paste to the paper. For
Foils and Mylars, apply paste to the wall; do not fold or crease the
wall covering. For Fabrics, manufacturers recommendations for types
of paste to use for their product, are usually accurate.
- Before you start installing your wall covering, plan the whole room.
Know exactly where each strip of paper will lay. This way you will avoid
needing to fill in with narrow strips of paper near doors and windows.
It takes very little time and makes the whole job a pleasure.
- On dark pre-trimmed papers, to avoid white edges from showing, run
a similar color piece of chalk or pastel stick all around each end of
the roll of paper; the edge absorbs this color, and this can eliminate
a lot of problems with seams showing.
- When hanging long lengths of border, use a push pin to hold your border
to the wall while you move your ladder. The tiny hole left by the pin
will be hardly noticeable. If it can be seen, color the hole with a
water soluble pencil. In most situations, this method is much better
than setting up a scaffold.
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Submitted by:
Todd Klipper
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