Re: spotting in painting on acoustic ceiling?"mike" <mike@sbcglobal . net > wrote in
news:DY8Tj.2299$506.938@newssvr27.news.prodigy . net :
> "Steve" <respond@online.newsgroup> wrote in message
> news:Xns9A93D4E2CC506184365720018436572@66.250.146.128...
>> "mike" <mike@sbcglobal . net > wrote in
>> news:Ns8Tj.2298$506.212@newssvr27.news.prodigy . net :
>>
>>> Am getting my house ready to sell and after removing some less
>>> popular features, now have some holes to patch and touch up.
>>> Patching them is no problem, getting the paint to blend in is.
>>>
>>> The ceiling is a flat off-white and while I have matched the color
>>> pretty well, I cant get it as flat as the surrounding area so it
>>> will blend in. Am using flat interior wall paint but even it has a
>>> different finish that can be spotted pretty easy. I had the rest of
>>> the house painted, save the ceilings. I didn't think spotting in
>>> these areas would be that big of a deal.
>>>
>>> Anyone have any tips or tricks to blending in flat paint colors?
>>
>> It's a lost cause. You'll have to give up and paint the whole
>> ceiling. Sheen and color can vary from one can to the next even if
>> they're next to each other on the store shelf.
>>
>> You can switch from one can of paint to the next in the middle of a
>> wall and have it show. That's why pros mix all the cans in a big
>> bucket.
>
> understood - I have the color nailed, its the variation in "flat"
> thats killing me here. I'll confess, I did try tinting a sample of
> spackling. It dries flat and I thought it might help me acheive a
> less detectable, stealth finish but it didn't quite do the trick.
The sheen level varies too, but even worse. I learned not to stop for
lunch in the middle of a wall. Starting up again with the same can of
paint will show.
--
Steve B.
New Life Home Improvement