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Stripping wallpaper and repainting plans   
Our house is around 13 years old and when we moved in we went a bit OTT 
wallpapering the majority of the rooms.  We now want to strip the 
wallpaper and revert to painted walls.

All wallpaper is on a couple of coats of builders magnolia.

After searching the archives, I plan to use a 'paper tiger' to pierce 
the paper prior to using a steamer.

Assuming the walls are in good condition, would I just use sugar soap to 
remove any excess paste, or am I likely to need to sand the whole room? 
  Ideally, I'd like to avoid having to use lining paper.

Thanks

David
Date:Tue, 26 Jul 2005 12:01:41 +0100   Author:  

Re: Stripping wallpaper and repainting plans   
In article <42e61816$0$27086$db0fefd9@news.zen.co.uk>,
	David Perkns  writes:

> Our house is around 13 years old and when we moved in we went a bit OTT 
> wallpapering the majority of the rooms.  We now want to strip the 
> wallpaper and revert to painted walls.
> 
> All wallpaper is on a couple of coats of builders magnolia.
> 
> After searching the archives, I plan to use a 'paper tiger' to pierce 
> the paper prior to using a steamer.


That's normally only necessary if the paper is waterproof.
Always try without doing this first, as if it works, you will
get the paper off in larger sheets, sometimes whole sheets,
which makes the job much faster, and you won't have damaged
the wall behind.


> Assuming the walls are in good condition, would I just use sugar soap to 
> remove any excess paste, or am I likely to need to sand the whole room? 
>   Ideally, I'd like to avoid having to use lining paper.


Just sugar soap and then rinse off.

-- 
Andrew Gabriel
Date:26 Jul 2005 12:24:34 GMT   Author:  

Re: Stripping wallpaper and repainting plans   
I was told by a professional that hanging 1400 grade lining paper improves
acoustics, stops any cracks showing and has a better overall result. After
1) painting a skimmed wall and
2) painting a wall covered in1400 lining paper
I'd agree that lining paper is the better option. It looks 'flatter' in my
opinion. Just a thought.
But yeah, just sugar soap and water, and all the glue comes off. I found the
best cloth for this job was an old towel ripped into cloths. No need to
sand.
Will.


"David Perkns"  wrote in message 
news:42e61816$0$27086$db0fefd9@news.zen.co.uk...

> Our house is around 13 years old and when we moved in we went a bit OTT 
> wallpapering the majority of the rooms.  We now want to strip the 
> wallpaper and revert to painted walls.
>
> All wallpaper is on a couple of coats of builders magnolia.
>
> After searching the archives, I plan to use a 'paper tiger' to pierce the 
> paper prior to using a steamer.
>
> Assuming the walls are in good condition, would I just use sugar soap to 
> remove any excess paste, or am I likely to need to sand the whole room? 
> Ideally, I'd like to avoid having to use lining paper.
>
> Thanks
>
> David 
Date:Tue, 26 Jul 2005 20:48:14 GMT   Author:  

Thanks chaps.   
I'll get the wife on to it straight away ;-)
Date:Fri, 29 Jul 2005 12:37:02 +0100   Author: