Home Repair and Do It Yourself Tips from the Natural Handyman

Welcome to the Natural Handyman Website!!
Rockler Woodworking's unique collection of must-have tools and stuff for do-it-yourselfers!

FREE "Handy" Magazine                  Start your own Handyman Business!                    Do-It-Yourself  Spas and Hot Tubs!  

Return to Painting and Decorating Library Index

Matching paint means never having to say... OOPS!

Matching a color is as easy as putting a hole in the wall...

The assumption here is that you need to repair the wall, or maybe the paint has been stained somehow. Though you could borrow or buy a set of paint chips from your local paint store, I have found a quality paint store will do a better matching job than most people will... if you provide them with a small paint sample.

If your walls are drywall, simply cut out a section of the paper only with a utility knife. Cut an oval-shaped, 1"x 2" slot in the wall, piercing only through the surface of the paper... an eighth of an inch deep is plenty. Use the knife to lift a corner of the paper, and then peel it from the wall. Take this sample to the paint store for matching. The cleaner the cut, the easier the patching.

You can also cut out a small section of plaster, though it is somewhat messier.

Don't do touchups in high traffic areas or over repairs... paint the wall instead!

If the walls were painted more than a few years ago, the walls will not touch up well at all (the exception being with stock off whites from the same manufacturer... in other words an exact color match). The effective gloss or sheen of paints from different manufacturers (yes... even flat paints vary in "flatness") will make a touchup show even in the color match is perfect!

This is especially true in high traffic, fingerprints-on-the-walls type areas! Get a quart of closely matching paint, and just paint that wall, corner to corner, being careful not to get any of the new paint on an adjacent wall. You will be amazed how even slightly different colors will blend well at a corner.

If you must touchup new or old work... don't ever just brush on the paint. Feather it in!!

Even if your paint is a perfect match, if you just brush it on, it will appear to be more glossy than the rest of the wall! Instead do this:

  • If you are doing a small area (less than 3"x3"), apply the paint by daubing it on, starting in the center of the touchup area and working outward until you being to slightly overlap into good paint. As it dries, the irregularities will lessen reflectivity and give a less noticeable touchup.
  • If you are doing a larger area, put some paint on the area with a brush right up to the edges of the touchup area, and, using a dry mini-roller, roll briskly over the area to add texture (also called stippling) to the new paint. The roller will give more uniformity in a larger area than the freehand brush approach. As with the brush technique, feather the new paint into the old to make the touchup blend into the wall.

Return to Painting and Decorating Library Index

 

Home    Repair Articles      Enter A Sweepstakes!!     Q&A with NH
 Books        Links Library        About our site         Find a Handyman
Submit an article            Find a Licensed Home Improvement Contractor
Advertise on this site             Privacy Info            Comments or  questions

Copyright 2008 G. George Ventures, Inc.     All Rights Reserved  
Linking to our site is allowed and encouraged!