If I may add somethings which I believe may help minimize the chance of NOT getting paid: 1) have an open conversation up front before or very close the the start of the project and note, with the customer possible issues. 2) before starting- take pictures of the project area that show wall, floor, ceiling or other types of damage or potential issues such as popped drywall screws, paint on the floor, chipped furniture or broken/cracked wall decor/fixtures, etc. 3) damage to or imperfections in the wallpaper itself before hanging the sheet. Take a quick photo of it pre-paste, if possible. 4) work in a clean, safe, conscientious, & courteous manner.
That was brilliant… Thank you very much and I should do more of that… Taking pictures because sometimes when I don’t, I regret it and find myself over explaining what I should’ve done from the beginning thank you very much
Your trim line in the corner varies in thickness because of your method of trimming, not because the corner is off. If you had trimmed an equal amount off of the adjacent wall, there would be no variation in thickness.. You are welcome! Cheers.
Thank you for your detailed explanation. I’m new to wallpapering but did one successful job and I have four clients now who want quotes. I did notice you were working over textured walls and in previous videos I believe you said that was a no no. Also curious if you used wallpaper primer before rolling the glue on the wall? Also how do you know when a non pasted wallpaper needs to be booked vs when you can just roll the wall? Thanks for your help. I appreciate your videos. I’m in FL too so deal with a lot of orange peel.
Hi. Do I need to Prime my wall first? It’s painted in an eggshell finish but I took the builder grade closet racks out and had to patch and sand quite a few holes. Not sure if I can apply right over that.
it's always good to prime with an acrylic primer on every job prior to install, but a quality eggshell is fine to hang overand small patched holes usually won't cause any issues
@@sebeden12I was curious if you only need wallpaper primer when applying adhesive over flat paint and you can get away without using it the glossier the paint is? I had adhesive lift the flat paint and texture before .
@@larissaorjuela9743 usually a good sanding will be fine for satin and semigloss but flat I always prime. Also in bathrooms with shower I always prime no matter what paint.
I was curious if he primed the wall before applying adhesive? Didn’t look like it. I had a terrible experience not priming the wall before applying adhesive.
If I may add somethings which I believe may help minimize the chance of NOT getting paid:
1) have an open conversation up front before or very close the the start of the project and note, with the customer possible issues.
2) before starting- take pictures of the project area that show wall, floor, ceiling or other types of damage or potential issues such as popped drywall screws, paint on the floor, chipped furniture or broken/cracked wall decor/fixtures, etc.
3) damage to or imperfections in the wallpaper itself before hanging the sheet. Take a quick photo of it pre-paste, if possible.
4) work in a clean, safe, conscientious, & courteous manner.
That was brilliant… Thank you very much and I should do more of that… Taking pictures because sometimes when I don’t, I regret it and find myself over explaining what I should’ve done from the beginning thank you very much
Your trim line in the corner varies in thickness because of your method of trimming, not because the corner is off. If you had trimmed an equal amount off of the adjacent wall, there would be no variation in thickness.. You are welcome! Cheers.
Great content! Keep up the amazing work!
Thank you for your detailed explanation. I’m new to wallpapering but did one successful job and I have four clients now who want quotes. I did notice you were working over textured walls and in previous videos I believe you said that was a no no. Also curious if you used wallpaper primer before rolling the glue on the wall? Also how do you know when a non pasted wallpaper needs to be booked vs when you can just roll the wall? Thanks for your help. I appreciate your videos. I’m in FL too so deal with a lot of orange peel.
Hi. Do I need to Prime my wall first? It’s painted in an eggshell finish but I took the builder grade closet racks out and had to patch and sand quite a few holes. Not sure if I can apply right over that.
it's always good to prime with an acrylic primer on every job prior to install, but a quality eggshell is fine to hang overand small patched holes usually won't cause any issues
@@sebeden12I was curious if you only need wallpaper primer when applying adhesive over flat paint and you can get away without using it the glossier the paint is? I had adhesive lift the flat paint and texture before .
@@larissaorjuela9743 usually a good sanding will be fine for satin and semigloss but flat I always prime. Also in bathrooms with shower I always prime no matter what paint.
I notice you are papering onto a textured wall. Does that create any other issues? Like the needing extra glue for the paper to adhere or air bubbles?
Drywall is like the flat Earth theory. It’s lumpy at best.
that depends on the amount of texture sometimes you will need more glue ,but the paper will suck down into the texture and shouldn't leave any bubbles
I was curious if he primed the wall before applying adhesive? Didn’t look like it. I had a terrible experience not priming the wall before applying adhesive.
Thank you for this video! Does anyone know which wallpaper is this i would like to recommended it to a client?
It says in the first 10 seconds of the video
good information, could have halved the video time by not taking so long to explain.