Title: Wallpaper removal Post by: Venkman on June 17, 2008, 03:01:55 PM We just closed today and immediately set about getting the kids' room ready. First order was removing the gawdawful wallpaper. The vinyl stuff was easy to remove. The three goddamned layers beneath that though... not so much. 3 hours and I managed to clear 3 feet of about 50 feet of total wall, and that with a substantial amount of compound work to follow. I swear they built this place in '69 around the damned wallpaper. The style was old in the 40s.
In any case, anyone have any luck with simlarly layered aged crap? I'm on my way to get a steamer now having done Dif, Fabric Softener/water, scrapers, all that stuff. It's steamer or contractor at this point unless someone's got some magic method. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Nerf on June 17, 2008, 03:14:44 PM Steaming can fuck up the drywall, the easiest way to do it would probably just be to demo it the studs and re-drywall it. When we built out the cybercafe, it took about a day to frame up the metal stud walls and drywall the new office, which was about the size of a childs bedroom.
Taping and floating is incredibly easy once you get the hang of it. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Nebu on June 17, 2008, 03:18:56 PM Best tip I can offer is to use coarse sandpaper or something similar to score the existing walpaper first. This way, solvents and steam can better penetrate the wallpaper for easier removal. With that many layers, it may be easiest to just demo the wall and re-sheetrock. An advantage of this is that you can then use some cheap insulation in the walls to better soundproof rooms as you go. Great to do if you have kids.
Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Grimwell on June 17, 2008, 05:04:35 PM Demo and start over. If they put that much crap on the walls, they probably need it anyway. Plus, after you figure in your worth by the hour, removing the old paper is pretty expensive... and you are likely to start damaging the walling under it in the process causing a need for repair or new drywall.
Nuke and restart! (congrats on the house!) Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Viin on June 17, 2008, 05:26:45 PM Hire someone! Do not attempt yourself!
Don't ask how I know! Edit: Or, as Grimwell says, demo and put new drywall up, 10000000000 times easier than removing wallpaper and prepping so you can paint. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Merusk on June 17, 2008, 05:30:55 PM Steaming can fuck up the drywall, the easiest way to do it would probably just be to demo it the studs and re-drywall it. When we built out the cybercafe, it took about a day to frame up the metal stud walls and drywall the new office, which was about the size of a childs bedroom. Taping and floating is incredibly easy once you get the hang of it. This. You'll save time and headaches in the long run if it's as bad as you say it is. Plus you don't have to put up studs.. It'll take about two to three days. Ask your HBA for some reputable drywall contractors. I guarantee they're working cheap right now as NOBODY is building as much as they used to and the subs need the work. Haggle if you have to, but keep that in mind. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: pants on June 17, 2008, 06:24:24 PM Right click on your desktop.
Select Properties. Select Desktop. Select None for Background, as per this image. (http://img169.imageshack.us/img169/5563/wallpapermf7.jpg) Thank you! I'm here all night! :rimshot: www.instantrimshot.com Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Abagadro on June 17, 2008, 06:35:58 PM If you are still going to go manual, make sure that you have actually removed all of the vinyl stuff. It's entirely possible that you removed only the top layer of that stuff and that you have the vinyl backing still up there, which basically impedes the penetration of anything else you are going to try. Roughing it up (as suggested up there) or even scoring it is going to be necessary to get whatever solution (enzymatic, fabric softener, vinegar, whatever) from actually getting down to the glue.
I'd also go with the demo though if it is that bad. I had some sort of flat plaster in my first house I took down wallpaper so there was no option, but I only had two layers. If you do have drywall and can go down to the studs, in addition to upping your insulation you could wire it for home theater/network etc. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Venkman on June 17, 2008, 06:39:50 PM I'll be sure to tip the waiters.
I had considered demo'ing. Certainly easier. But these walls are the sort of crazy-solid I'd be depressed to destroy. The neighborhood we're moving too used to constitute "rich" back in the late 60s, and they built this particularly development to last. This isn't the put-my-hand-through-it crap you buy at Lowes. All of the scoring I've done with those round wax-on/wax-off rolling scorers barely nicked it, while cutting through what turned out to be five layers of paper like nothing (that after the sixth layer came off like a a fresh slice of cheese). The vinyl didn't leave the paper back luckily. The steaming went pretty well. But I've put out the call to someone anyway. I could do it and compound over the crappy parts no problem. Built enough walls in my time to be fairly good at it. It's just the time. We're moving in next Wednesday and getting carpet installed right after. I don't foresee having both bedrooms and the hallways done by then. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Viin on June 17, 2008, 06:58:27 PM Are they lath and plaster walls?
They usually feel like cement, and are all hell to fix. So yah, don't break those if that's the case. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Merusk on June 18, 2008, 03:00:00 AM Yeah it sounds like it is plaster. If that's the case go ahead and steam the paper off. It's one thing to demo and replace drywall, but plaster is a lot more solid, makes a huge mess when you demo it and drywall isn't anywhere near as nice.
Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Sky on June 18, 2008, 06:09:26 AM I just took the demo route and put in 5/8" drywall, but I had the time. Unless you do it for a living, if time is the consideration, hire a contractor. I had one come in for the bathroom and they got all that done in the time I've done the living room. When I finish up I'll be putting some before/after shots on flickr and link them here.
And congratulations on the house! Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: angry.bob on June 18, 2008, 07:18:55 AM Having just de-papered a 3200sqft house with plaster walls I give you the following advice: just rip the shit down and hire a plasterer (if you can find one) to put a new finish coat up. Most likely anything you do to get the paper off will ruin the finish coat of plaster and make it bubble up. So just tear the paper off. If they didn't use sizing when they put it up it will take off big chunks of the finish coat. Don't worry about it, the rough coat is like concrete and just as tough. When you get done taking it all down, scrape off the loose bits and call the plasterer. Our final cost to get glass-smooth plaster walls put back up was about $1.10 per square foot of floor. The best money I ever spent.
If it's drywall, just tear it all out. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Baldrake on June 18, 2008, 12:14:54 PM The breadth of knowledge on this board continues to amaze me.
Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Venkman on June 18, 2008, 04:36:03 PM Thanks all. I found the perfect storm today. I'll get the exact name, but there's a scraper I found that works so well I bought three of them. And we rented two other steamers. It's slow going, but if you move the head just right, you can be constantly steaming and cutting until your arms fall off.
I'll be lucky to get the kids room depapered before we move next week, but that's the one that matters most, and after some exploration is the only room with that sheer amount of paper on it. Most other rooms are either just vinyl with a layer of backing or at most vinyl with only two layers beneath. I'm just going to buy a good steamer (probably around $250-300) and keep it. 9 of our 11 rooms have wallpaper on them, I'd rather invest in central air than spend on to someone take that all out at once, it's the sort of thing I can do while listening to podcasts, and it's sorta therapeutic :-) Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: FatuousTwat on June 18, 2008, 11:52:16 PM There is a product specifically designed for this, I've used to all over my house (it used to be covered in this ugly ass Santa Fe shit). Let me go find it...
DIF. http://www.zinsser.com/product_detail.asp?productid=17 Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Venkman on June 19, 2008, 04:58:54 AM Yea, that's where I went first. Dif and knives. That worked well on the first layer of paper (which was under the top layer of vinyl which came off even without scoring). Dif wouldn't penetrate to the wall board though. We ended up doing more damage to the wall than paper removed.
Steamer's the best solution for our particular issue. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Sky on June 19, 2008, 06:26:00 AM I'm just going to buy a good steamer (probably around $250-300) and keep it. 9 of our 11 rooms have wallpaper on them, I'd rather invest in central air than spend on to someone take that all out at once, it's the sort of thing I can do while listening to podcasts, and it's sorta therapeutic :-) That's why I'm doing the drywall in the living room. I have a few more walls to do, and investing in the tools now (with a few bucks from my home improvement loan for the bathroom) means I can do them very cheaply in the future. My contractor rocks, but I do work at a library (time>$).If you hit any stubborn spots, mix in some vinegar. I was googling ways to remove tub decals and vinegar seems to be some magical adhesive remover. My bathroom looks hilarious with new ~everything~ except the window and tub which are totally fucking nasty until I can clean them. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Merusk on June 19, 2008, 06:49:23 AM It's because Vinegar is a mild acid and less caustic than Ammonia with none of the "Oops, was there bleach in that?" worries. :grin:
Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Nebu on June 19, 2008, 06:58:15 AM I'm a big fan of solvents for cleaning adhesives... of course, I have a lab full of choices to bring home. A luxury most people don't have. I've used gasoline, terpentine, and nail polish remover on many occasions though. You just have to be careful about the surface composition and allowing it to contact other surfaces not metal or ceramic.
Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Sky on June 19, 2008, 07:07:04 AM I was considering using some old gas or kerosene that's in a can in garage. But I think it's ancient, from two owners ago :uhrr:
Have I mentioned I really really dislike the kid (well, 33) who owned the house for the last three years? Fucking lazy clueless fuck. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Nebu on June 19, 2008, 07:10:12 AM Have I mentioned I really really dislike the kid (well, 33) who owned the house for the last three years? Fucking lazy clueless fuck. I always try to negotiate cleaning costs into the purchase agreement. I've owned too many places where I got there on move-in day and had to spend 3 days just cleaning before I could unload the truck. It's frightening the shit that people will live in. FRIGHTENING! Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: schild on June 19, 2008, 07:11:16 AM Why would you even considering buying or renting a dirty place? It's not even a possible scenario I would find myself in. I would tell the owner/landlord/real estate agent that the place is a dump and to call me back when it's clean like the day it was fucking built.
Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Baldrake on June 19, 2008, 07:52:08 AM Why would you even considering buying or renting a dirty place? It's not even a possible scenario I would find myself in. I would tell the owner/landlord/real estate agent that the place is a dump and to call me back when it's clean like the day it was fucking built. It is currently a buyer's market in the US. This has not always been the case.Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Sky on June 19, 2008, 08:06:02 AM I did get a better price based on condition. And it's only the bathroom that was really dirty, and most of that I demo'd out. The rest is mostly dust. The PITI is cheaper than renting a decent sized apartment, and much less than renting a comparable house (about 2/3rds of a rental house). I just added five figures to the value in the last month because it's in a desirable neighborhood that's selling much higher, because this place needed the renovations I'm doing.
It's a really great deal and the neighborhood is ridiculously good. Elementary and middle schools, fire house, a block away. But it's a dead end with land-locked treed lots, quiet. I'm amazed I found something this good in the price range. Also, it's still mostly a sellers market here, unless you're shooting the moon. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Merusk on June 19, 2008, 09:00:34 AM Why would you even considering buying or renting a dirty place? It's not even a possible scenario I would find myself in. I would tell the owner/landlord/real estate agent that the place is a dump and to call me back when it's clean like the day it was fucking built. The owner/ Landloard you've got someplace to go with. The real estate agent will laugh at you, explain that you signed the papers, they have your money and you should've thought of that before closing. Enjoy your new home! Just sayin'. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Viin on June 19, 2008, 09:39:35 AM Also, it's still mostly a sellers market here, unless you're shooting the moon. It is here in Colorado too, but only for luxury homes. The "normal" home (100k to 400k) is most certainly a buyer's market. Not to mention the 100s of condos for sale in downtown Denver.. I think they built 3-4 large condo complexes the last couple years and they are building more! Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Venkman on June 19, 2008, 10:00:50 AM The real estate agent will laugh at you, explain that you signed the papers, they have your money and you should've thought of that before closing. Enjoy your new home! That's why you do a walkthrough before the closing. Both houses we had last minute stuff the prior owners honestly forgot to clear out. As I'm doing that myself to clear out of my current house, I can easily see missing stuff as well. There's just too many corners to hide stuff in. You work with the lawyers and the real estate agents to get all this stuff up front. If it turns out you need to hold money back because they forgot to remove an old water heater, your lawyer will do that. Did they leave a bunch of crap on the driveway? Same thing. Lots of people have been there. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Venkman on June 19, 2008, 10:04:12 AM Also, it's still mostly a sellers market here, unless you're shooting the moon. It is here in Colorado too, but only for luxury homes. The "normal" home (100k to 400k) is most certainly a buyer's market. Not to mention the 100s of condos for sale in downtown Denver.. I think they built 3-4 large condo complexes the last couple years and they are building more! The one part of the market that didn't seem to melt down, at least in my area, was starter homes for buyers who plan to live in them (not flipper folks). At least in my area. So I got a lot more for mine than I thought I would while trading up to what amounted to an estate sale. I figure the wallpaper is my penance for having lucked into an awesome deal :-) Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Selby on June 19, 2008, 05:15:53 PM That's why you do a walkthrough before the closing. Just because you do a walk-thru doesn't mean the old owner isn't going to shit all over the place in their rush to move out. We had to arrange seller's rent for 3 months while they moved out, and when we moved in we found that they had moved all of the furniture around during showing the place to cover the NASTIEST carpet I have ever encountered. I was pissed when I walked into the place for the first time and found all the shitty mcshit cheap shit that the owner had left in the garage and on the side of the house "as a favor to us" so we could install it when we moved in. Except it was the cheapest Home Depot shit imaginable that was all dinged up and broken (clearance aisle!) and left outside for 2-3 weeks to rust and rot exposed to the elements. I never wanted to beat a dipshit so badly. A free inherited house with a 65k Escalade in the driveway, and the lazy fuck wouldn't even spring to fix the broken flue in the original 35 year old heater.Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: FatuousTwat on June 19, 2008, 09:11:10 PM Yea, that's where I went first. Dif and knives. That worked well on the first layer of paper (which was under the top layer of vinyl which came off even without scoring). Dif wouldn't penetrate to the wall board though. We ended up doing more damage to the wall than paper removed. Steamer's the best solution for our particular issue. Ah, I've never had to deal with more than 1 or 2 layers of wallpaper. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Sky on June 20, 2008, 06:35:08 AM Just because you do a walk-thru doesn't mean the old owner isn't going to shit all over the place in their rush to move out. I scheduled my walkthrough the night before closing first thing the next morning. Thought that would cover it.The dipshit was still there DOING LAUNDRY. I told him he needed to be gone, that the contract said I take possession on closing (after his agent's lawyer delayed the closing for almost a full month to buy him time). He kinda mumbled. So I close, go get keys, the fiancee and I go buy a grill and head to the house for a little celebration. Dipshit is STILL THERE, moving stuff. I told him "last load, you're trespassing." He ended up leaving a bunch of shit, but luckily no new damage to the house. He left his air conditioner and since my niceness (not something I have in volume) had dried up, I chuckled when we had the heat wave last week and it hit humid high 90s. Also, he had been doing laundry and the washer (which I got in the contract) needs repair because there is the most disgustingly foul odors emanating from it. Anyway, getting back to Selby's story. Cheap shit. Yeah, I've already replaced a bunch of shit most slumlords wouldn't put in their apartments (I know from experience). My dipshit agent wondered why I wanted to replace the new toilet. It's a fucking GERBER toilet with a plastic flush handle, lines were the cheapest shit possible. Vanity was a $20 special particle board and plastic. Light fixture circa 1950. People amaze me with their tolerance to live in cheap shit that doesn't work. And I was a band gypsy living in what I thought was squalor when I was younger. Damn. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: bhodi on June 20, 2008, 08:09:53 AM This is as good a place as any. Amuse yourself with these slideshows!
http://www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/photos/0,,1220600,00.html http://www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/photos/0,,1548031,00.html http://www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/photos/0,,1587613,00.html http://www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/photos/0,,20158517,00.html http://www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/photos/0,,20048555,00.html Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Nija on June 20, 2008, 08:43:33 AM Buying a house now is crazy unless you're getting a place for less than $200k.
Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Sky on June 20, 2008, 08:55:16 AM Buying a house now is crazy unless you're getting a place for less than $200k. I didn't say I bought four houses :awesome_for_real:Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Nija on June 20, 2008, 09:14:02 AM Sorry, that must have been my California acting up again.
Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Jayce on June 20, 2008, 09:28:02 AM Have I mentioned I really really dislike the kid (well, 33) who owned the house for the last three years? Fucking lazy clueless fuck. I can't say I've ever met someone who actually had happy feeling toward the previous owner of their house. Everyone seems to buy from Mr. Half Ass. :awesome_for_real: That said, your experience is the worst I've heard. Even the old owner living in the garage for three weeks story wasn't quite as bad as "Uh, 'sit OK if I wash this last load of clothes dude?" Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Sky on June 20, 2008, 10:28:39 AM In the washer I just scheduled for repair because it smells like satan's anus despite running several tubs of bleach through it...
Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Bunk on June 20, 2008, 10:51:09 AM The 60ish woman who lived in my condo left me two blouses in the bedroom closet. I'm also afraid to find out why the underlay is crunchy in one spot in the living room.
Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Sky on June 20, 2008, 10:55:04 AM I found a few teeth in a drawer.
Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Venkman on June 20, 2008, 04:47:37 PM Man, I got nothing. Worst I've seen is what's being fixed on Tuesday. Someone thought it was a good idea to run the water pipe directly on top of the electrical box. I probably wouldn't notice it had the 100 amp service being entirely inadequate for our power needs anyway.
Quote from: Selby Just because you do a walk-thru doesn't mean the old owner isn't going to shit all over the place in their rush to move out. And that's why there's lawyers :-) I love the "shitty mcshit cheap shit" description though. Been there with the "favors" too. "Hey, here's some old garden tools that haven't been used in three generations." Thanks! Seriously though, my real estate agent kicks all sorts of ass, won all sorts of rewards in this part of the state, and most importantly, knows a whole fuckton of people. It's why we've worked with her. I don't care what the fee is for any of the people she recommends. Whenever I've had a problem, and whenever anyone I've referred her to has had one, we sic her on the issue. Luck maybe. I dunno. She was referred to me too. Maybe a pay it forward.Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Selby on June 20, 2008, 09:21:30 PM http://www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/photos/0,,1587613,00.html It wasn't corn, but we had a palm tree trying to grow in the gutters when I moved in. I don't think they had been flushed in 10 years and some really nasty stuff came out when I took a high pressure hose to it all.Buying a house now is crazy unless you're getting a place for less than $200k. I'm hating life over the mortgage, personally (it's fixed and not going anywhere, but it is still annoyingly high). But prices haven't gone down in our neighborhood or really anywhere outside of the barrio or 35 miles north\east of town, so finding a "deal" that isn't Temecula or Escon-TJ just doesn't exist. I do love having my own house and garage though, not having to deal with shitty apartments anymore is worth the hassle honestly.I can't say I've ever met someone who actually had happy feeling toward the previous owner of their house. Everyone seems to buy from Mr. Half Ass. My house in Texas wasn't bad. The owner maintained it and everything worked when we moved in. Not a complaint at all about it. California just seems to have a host of flakes who fuck everything up in their houses because they are too busy impressing everyone with their BMWs and Escalades.I am the kind of person who would prefer to buy a 100 year old house with ORIGINAL everything rather than some chucklefuck's idea of "upgrades" already installed (ala those house flipper shows where the dickhead buys the absolute cheapest appliances or re-uses carpet from another house). In my current house they didn't touch the master bathroom but re-did the guest bathroom with the aforementioned Home Depot specials. What is sad is that what was "cheap" in 1973 is now "decent quality" compared to what you buy at Homey Depots on clearance. The cabinets in the kitchen are the same way, very solid but ugly and nasty as hell since the previous owner decided putting stickem floor tiles inside would spice things up (and then proceeded to spill sugar and other liquids\solids without ever cleaning up). I don't have the intestinal fortitude to strip the cabinets down and make them nice again and really don't want to shell out $35k for new quality cabinets. The only thing that was 100% mandatory when I moved in was stripping the living room of the cardboard wallpaper\backing sheets and chair railing held in with picture nails (especially since I barely bumped one moving in and the whole 8ft section fell down). Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: FatuousTwat on June 21, 2008, 03:04:21 PM I found a few teeth in a drawer. This just means the house has taken a likin' to ye! :grin: Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Sky on June 21, 2008, 07:49:23 PM Selby, I hear you on the shitty modern upgrades. My house isn't actually in bad shape...except where the kid tried to do something. I swear he has some superpower to fuck up every home improvement he could muster up his amazingly small reserve of ambition to tackle. Thank god he didn't try the kitchen with it's 1970s era custom cabinets that are actually really nice and made of real wood that hasn't warped to shit.
Tried the vinegar on the tub decals...worked ok, but still a pain in the ass to remove. Got all the decal and much of the mylar layers up, going to soak it again tomorrow to finish removal. Such fun stuff on a sunny day. But I do enjoy drywalling, it's zen with some good tunes jamming. I'll be sanding like a mofo, though, it is my first time. I don't want to talk about Lake Basement. Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Bunk on June 21, 2008, 09:03:58 PM I don't envy you guys. I only have a two bedroom condo to deal with, and a year later and I'm only half way through painting the living room.
Cleaned out the closet today, found a skirt to go with the blouses. Anyone need any fashions suited to a grandmother with about a 40" waist? Title: Re: Wallpaper removal Post by: Furiously on June 22, 2008, 10:10:14 PM I loved the previous owner of my first house. He was great.
He spent all him money on drugs and turned the house into something everyone else was scared to buy, let cats wander through and piss all over the carpet. I got it for a song... The other thing you can do. Is just put a new layer of sheetrock over the old. Sure - the room will be 1 inch shorter in each direction. Oh no's! |