Walls First or Woodwork First

share

Do I emulsion the walls first, on a new build, ie bare plaster and new timber skirting boards and architraves, or do I prime, undercoat, then topcoat the woodwork, allow to dry, mask the skirts and arcs up and emulsion the walls, giving a clean line between skirt, arcs and wall?

2 Responses

  1. In your situation you will need to prime the walls and ceilings first. Then work on the woodwork. The main reason for this is caulking the gaps of the woodwork to the adjacent surfaces. Tooling caulking and its adhesion is much better over a good primer.

    Once the plaster is primed you can prime the trim with a good undercoater, fill nail holes, sand smooth, vacuum to remove the dust and finally caulk it in. Now you can paint. This is how I like to do it. I then mask off the trim, solid if spraying, then paint the ceilings and walls.

    The nice thing about painting the woodwork first is you don't have to be super careful with the walls. A nice straight line will come from the masking.

  2. In your situation you will need to prime the walls and ceilings first. Then work on the woodwork. The main reason for this is caulking the gaps of the woodwork to the adjacent surfaces. Tooling caulking and its adhesion is much better over a good primer.

    Once the plaster is primed you can prime the trim with a good undercoater, fill nail holes, sand smooth, vacuum to remove the dust and finally caulk it in. Now you can paint. This is how I like to do it. I then mask off the trim, solid if spraying, then paint the ceilings and walls.

    The nice thing about painting the woodwork first is you don't have to be super careful with the walls. A nice straight line will come from the masking.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

House painting Search

Trending posts

No posts found

Subscribe

Don’t miss our future updates! Get Subscribed Today!