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Handy Painting Tips to Help Everyone

By: Saen Ansellt

Applying Emulsion With a Roller
Applying emulsion with a roller will be quickest way of covering a sizable surface area, although you may require more coats than when painting using a brush since the paint goes on quite thinly using a roller. Roller sleeves can be found in various sizes and textures. Choose #a short#-pile sleeve for a smooth wall surface, and a shaggy sheepskinstyle sleeve for any more textured surface. The parts the roller cannot reach will have to get finished with a brush. Solid non-drip emulsion, which is supplied in a tray, can also be applied using a roller. As you apply the roller, the paint liquefies and allows the roller to pick up the correct amount of paint.

1 Pour the emulsion paint into the paint tray reservoir - it should be about a 3rd full. Dip the roller sleeve into the paint and roll it confidently up and down the tray’s ribbed incline to spread the paint evenly. Don’t overload the sleeve or paint will splatter everywhere.

2 Move the roller over the wall surface, using random strokes applied with a lightweight, even pressure. Try not to paint too fast or you will probably develop a fine mist of paint spray. Each time the roller is dipped in the paint, move it #to an# adjacent unpainted area and work your way back to your painted area in overlapping strokes to blend in the wet edges.

Using Paint Pads:
Paint pads come in different sizes. They are flat and rectangular with closely packed short fibres glued with a foam backing strip, which makes the pad flexible. Pads are good for painting large areas with liquid paint - the bigger the pad, the faster you cover the surface. They make less spray and mess than rollers, but they will need reloading with paint more often. Use a paint pad tray which includes a built-in ribbed roller on which excess paint will be removed.

1 Pour the paint into the paint pad tray, then draw the pad over the built-in roller to allocate the paint evenly and take away any excess - a paint pad will #give a# patchy finish if it’s loaded unequally, and will drip if there's too much paint on it.

2 Start painting near a corner and work in strips about four times the width of the pad. Keeping the pad flat on the wall, move it up and down the surface with a delicate scrubbing action.

Painting Edges - Cutting in
Rollers and bigger paint pads are very good for covering whole walls rapidly, but they can't reach all the way into the edges, you will have to finish off these areas with a brush or small paint pad - a process also known as ‘cutting in’. #This can be# done before or after #the main# painting, but you’ll obtain the most uniform finish when you #do it# before #the main# area is painted.

1 Paint four or five overlapping strokes at right angles towards the edge to fill the gap between #the edge# #and the# new paint. 2 Painting parallel to the edge, #go over# the first brush strokes in an extended sweeping motion. Repeat until the whole edge is painted.

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Believe me when I say that I understand how hard it can be to perform these tasks that I have written about in this article. I have applied these tips to many painting projects over the years but at the beginning when I first began in the painting trade there was much to learn. For my training I went to a company called - painter london - They taught me everything that I do know today.

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