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re: Can you or your man Jose paint without taping?

Posted on 8/19/23 at 5:10 am to
Posted by LSUtoBOOT
Member since Aug 2012
12489 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 5:10 am to
I find painting to be mindless relaxation that results in a visual sense of accomplishment that is surprisingly gratifying.
This post was edited on 8/19/23 at 10:21 am
Posted by IT_Dawg
Georgia
Member since Oct 2012
21865 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 5:37 am to
Get the Shurline edging tool….
Real painters hate it, but they work extremely well and let you zip around every edge.

Posted by kywildcatfanone
Wildcat Country!
Member since Oct 2012
119475 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 5:47 am to
Painters don't tape
Posted by BoogaBear
Member since Jul 2013
5610 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 6:12 am to
That thing works for about 6 inches then there is paint on everything.
Posted by MyRockstarComplex
The airport
Member since Nov 2009
3360 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 6:16 am to
quote:

Get the Shurline edging tool….


It seems to always leave a very small gap between the edge/trim.
Posted by SG_Geaux
Beautiful St George
Member since Aug 2004
78061 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 6:36 am to
I never tape when I paint.
Posted by LuckySo-n-So
Member since Jul 2005
22095 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 7:20 am to
quote:

I know good/most painters use good brushes and can just hand do it without tape... still amazes me.


Man, I’ve seen painters cut in crown molding on an 18’ ceiling with their paint brush on the end of a 10+’ pole while standing in the floor. And not get one hair’s worth of paint on the ceiling or wall. It’s fricking amazing. I would have a better chance of hitting Skenes’ fastball than doing that.
This post was edited on 8/19/23 at 7:25 am
Posted by Kay
Member since Mar 2011
1944 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 7:27 am to
I just did my living room and kitchen a few weeks ago. Have to tape, up and down 12 foot ladder. But saved myself probably a grand.
Posted by Macfly
BR & DS
Member since Jan 2016
8135 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 7:30 am to
Learned a couple of lessons. Don't cheap out on brushes or rollers. Spend the dough on a good brushes because they hold paint well and the bristles remain pliable and intact. Also, buy good paint which doesn't have to be the most expensive and certainly not the cheapest for good coverage.
Posted by Harry Morgan
Member since Sep 2019
9193 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 7:31 am to
quote:

It’s all in the strokes I love painting around trim

Posted by jose
Houma
Member since Feb 2009
28639 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 7:32 am to
Yes. Yes I can.
Posted by MyRockstarComplex
The airport
Member since Nov 2009
3360 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 7:34 am to
quote:

Also, buy good paint which doesn't have to be the most expensive and certainly not the cheapest for good coverage.


Subtle: I own a Benjamin Moore franchise brag
Posted by johnnyrocket
Ghetto once known as Baton Rouge
Member since Apr 2013
9790 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 7:39 am to
My brother in law owns a commercial painting company. He does well.
They don’t use tape.
They do use quality brushes.
When I had my house redone some rooms he kept the sheet rock toward the interior of the house skimming the walls. It’s hard to tell between old Sheetrock and new Sheetrock.

It’s a lot of prep which I don’t have the patience to get a quality paint job.
Posted by Macfly
BR & DS
Member since Jan 2016
8135 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 7:46 am to
Nah, it's the brush company.
Posted by baldona
Florida
Member since Feb 2016
20514 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 7:56 am to
quote:

Painters don't tape


Probably 20 years ago I’d agree. But with sprayers this simply isn’t true. Especially on new builds. Guys will spray rooms now, but especially exterior. Windows and other things are taped and they spray the exteriors with things like hardiboard.

Now, if you are talking repainting a room then mostly likely. But they still use plastic and tape to tape up furniture and what not from drips.
Posted by Thecoz
Member since Dec 2018
2553 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 8:02 am to
I have painted a LOT …and still not close to a professional….I actually have a professional in the house the last three weeks ripping out ceilings ( from a roof job gone bad…different thread )… in general he does not tape unless against stuff that he is skimming mud on for texture repair…


I use tape still when I want a clean line on the same surface or where two walls meet ( one wall one color and the adjacent one a different color)

But for where wall meets trim… as op said all about the right brush… invest in a quality trim brush and maintain it…
Posted by ShakeandBake
Member since Aug 2019
1162 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 8:11 am to
quote:

good/most painters


quote:

your man Jose


These usually don’t come together. You can get cheap or you can get skilled. As someone who’s dad used to paint homes for a living, I’ve seen skilled and it doesn’t exist with the Hispanic labor today.
Posted by Thecoz
Member since Dec 2018
2553 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 8:15 am to
Btw… if you do want tape help.. as op said paint the wall first… let it dry .. then just run a single line of frog tape on the wall above the trim.. easy to put on since just long strips and no bending tape around the molding… also good for hard to reach places like behind toilet etc… only takes a few minutes to tape the wall and then you can cut the trim in with a good brush but will go very fast since you can slip and hit the wall if your hand get tired.
Posted by jpainter6174
Boss city
Member since Feb 2014
5341 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 8:17 am to
Get a purdy brush with an angled end!
Posted by TigerCoon
Member since Nov 2005
18891 posts
Posted on 8/19/23 at 8:20 am to
That was my experience with most painting gimmicks.

Of course, that's also my experience with brushes and rollers.
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