Everyone shitting on him like they're all professional painters. This is good for the casual diy person who doesn't have a lifetime of experience learning to paint perfect lines
I love this guy he takes his time teaches slowly so its easy to do. Sharing his craft not lieing or keeping secrets to boast himself. If each one teach one we would have more ppl working and less in need. Helping one another. ❤ #jalpenolover
I’ve been a painting contractor for 15 years and I can second what you are saying. Professionals are able to cut in with the white straight with ease. But the caulking trick with the body color works just fine to for the average person. Nice job jalapeño!
Well, I think it would help if he puts the tape since the beginning on the baseboard, then the cualk, then let the caulk dry n paint the wall. This is the best way for the DIY's.
@robert mayes yes, this is why caulk has to be wiped or cleaned then let it dry so it doesn't Crack when the paint dries. Also if caulk is still wet the brush will drag it .
@robert mayes if u r a pro. Did u consider that its better to let every material dry the proper time so it works better?? Do u knw that if u apply paint on wet calking there is a big chance that when ur paint dries n the caulk starts dryin( not the same day but in about 2 days) there will be a Crack on paint. If caulk Is clean n let it dry ( the caulk he is using is the fast drying one 10 - 30 depending how much or thick the caulk, temperature etc) when paint it's still a little wet u can remove te tape or when it's completely dry just don't pull it hard make it slowly . U have experience n practice so u knw how to make ur projects work but to ppl who doesn't they have to be told more info so they don't make mistakes. Jalapeño solutions is not a pro but it's good.
Professional painter here please tape off the base first, then cut it and then roll it this way it doesn’t picture frame on you when you do your second coat picture frame meaning you see a darker outline around the edges, then you do on the wall
It’s due to the brush applying more paint than the rollers. Brush first to roll out If you roll first then brush the brush is too thick and never rolled out giving you the picture frame. The thing is home owners can’t tell usually but if they’re wanting straight lines like this they probably don’t want the picture frame!
I guarantee you lines with a brush is straighter than this. You finish with painting the baseboards last. That's where you get your straight lines. Homeowners use alex dap products. I've never seen a respected professional dap anything. I've been painting since 1996.
The caulking after taping is for textured walls (especially deep textured walls). If you use just tape, the paint will just barely squeeze underneath the tape between the lumps and ridges of the texture not making it a super straight line. Of course, using a Purdy eliminates all that IF you know how to use it/cut properly. For everyone else, this is worth it.
All these painters saying they can do perfect lines without the tape. I’ve been a contractor for 30 years and yes there are good painters but if you want it perfect you gotta tape and caulk it. Post videos of your work or STFU.
I'm from an old school professional family. However, I'm getting older and have high anxiety, I can appreciate this hack.plus, I love the smoothness of caulk on my finger. Lol
It looks amazing, the only thing I will say is, I he sould have introduced the caulking after painting to the corners where the base meets the wall, I would have brought out the base more and made it pop. And since it is the smaller part of the house, I think it deserves more attention
It is a textured wall, it would look haggard if you caulked after paint. I used to think the same thing when I worked for builders, they just want stuff done, don’t do it proper. You caulk, then paint.
@@jeshuaadams5869 Agree to disagree, the paint does the work of distinguishing the trim from the wall, (assuming it’s painted baseboard. Caulk is not meant to be seen, especially if the trim isn’t white.
In the amount of time it takes to set this up you could've just learned how to cut properly. I learned in about 20 minutes. It's not hard, just need to be patient. And nowadays there are plenty of videos online teaching how to properly cut a line. I had to learn literally on my first day as an apprentice in a client's house. It was either learn how to do it now, or don't come back tomorrow
Just a quick note To all who attemp this method easiest way to achieve it is if you make sure you see the edge of the tape threw the chalking that way you know it ain't to thick because you can mess it up if the chalking is to thick great method
Definitely appreciate that tip i got a few guys at work that are just starting to paint and im always having to come back n back to explain things and what to do n what not to do with the brush or roller this will definitely hit home run for them tho thanks appreciate it ...,
I am not a pro but experimented with taping and cutting. In most cases if you have steady hands, cut. Paint always bleeds even with tape and sometimes its even uglier than a non steady hand.
Good videos. I'm just wondering where you live and work that all the walls have texture. Where I am, textured wall we're left that back in the 80s and popcorn ceilings we're gone by 2010
And that was absolute hell in 2010 too!! You walk in and almost duck down to miss those god awful monstrosities hanging from the ceiling... texture and popcorn should have been gone by, well, they should have never, ever been invented in the first place... yuk.
As a professional, I only use frog tape because without a doubt it’s the best in the business. You can use blue tape if you know what you’re doing, but even if you know what you’re doing, that stuff is unforgivable and is prone to problems over the better solution.
Great job man.. To everyone on here… It’s all about the end results! It doesn’t matter and client will never care how you got there! Use all the tools that help you accomplish your goal:)
15 years experience professional here ….. rule #1 don’t use tape… don’t paint the wall to the base…. Paint the base to the wall…. Rest of the trim paint the wall to the trim…. It to time consuming to tape baseboards… or try to cut the wall to the base… you will get straighter lines if you just use the old school way.
Let it setup for a little bit, you've got about 15 minutes working time with the caulking, remove it before then. Don't let it dry or you'll get paint tares
Have u ever tried cutting the caulking nozzle straight and pushing the caulking tube forward rather the plulling it if u hold the gun at the right angle the nozzle tools the caulking and requires almost no re-working
@@andrejslv4192 how do you know its dumb if you haven't tried. If you dont have the skill i understand why you might get defensive and call it dumb when u have never even tried it. You will use less then half the material the end result looks better and your finger or tools dont get covered in caulk something your probably use to.
We know what a knifes edge is… you ever heard of other methods? These techniques didn’t come out of nowhere , lemme guess you paint every single day and do it for a living
Very good explanation! Been looking through loads of videos for this. Thank you! 🙌 ETA: do you usually paint the walls first and skirtings second, or other way round? Sorry if obvious - not a professional painter here just trying to sort my flat on a shoestring budget. Thank you! 🙏
It doesn’t matter what you do as long as it delivers perfect results. And to all the lame “painters” that laugh at people that use clever methods to provide great finish product best believe they are bitter haters that they didn’t think of it first
Don't do it bro you're better off putting the frog tape and sealing it with a five and one or a spatula the caulking shrinks and after you paint it it it cracks because of the caulking shrinking
Yellow frog tape pre moist with semi moist rag then caulk frog tape adhesive expands through moisture the caulk after you pre expand the adhesive will create a razor line
Quick question, does anyone know, do you usually paint the walls first and skirtings second, or other way round? Sorry if obvious - not a professional painter here, just trying to sort my flat on a shoestring budget. Thank you! 🙏
I'm starting a whole-house interior painting project and you can bet your sweet hippie that I'm going to use tape to get nice, straight lines. Thanks for sharing!!!
How long do you wait before painting over the caulk or can you paint right on top? And how long u too you relive the tape? Google says the opposite of all the videos I’ve been seeing
So what’s the purpose of the caulking? Would you caulk between the base boards and the wall for the whole house? I want to paint my house but have found that baseboard connected to the wall aren’t as smooth or have these small imperfections when taping
I love watching your helpful tips on diy, but what would be really helpful is that at the end of your video shorts you actually took a three second time frame to show the labels on the materials that you are using like the caulks and whatever, because in all of these videos I have noticed that they moved too fast to get a screenshot of what product I need to buy at the store to do this job at home myself. Thanks! Otherwise, you're doing great and I love watching your tips and hints thank you!!
The amount of pennies per foot painters commenting here is alarming, everybody claiming they can cut clean lines, doesn’t use caulk.. blah blah blah. Elevate your shit, the best painters absolutely use caulk, and tape. Maybe not always like this, but on almost any given job it’s there.
@john dunne probably why no one wants an Irish paint job, you wouldn’t get work here bud. Go to a million dollar house, or any of the houses I’ve worked in over the years, you’d be cleaning all the specs off of the floor and trim without tape.
This method is the hard way… price wise at least… you’re better off either buying a stiff brush and taking your time to properly cut OR get some Green frog tape that does this “trick” as well
@carlosf9278 yeah I just cut it with a brush and as long as I take my time it ends up great. this technique can work great for doing straight lines on textured surfaces,
@@lyssakate Yep, so when you trim with a brush, it leaves brush marks, unlike a roller. If you roll first, when you trim you'll get brush marks at least a few inches wide. But if you trim first, you can come back with a roller and roll close to your trim which covers most of the brush marks. It's pretty easy to roll within an inch or less of the trim. Also, make sure to remove all outlet/light switch covers before you paint, that way you don't have to try painting around them. Anyway, there are other ways to do it, this is what works for me. If you've never painted before I would suggest watching a couple RUclips videos first, as there are different ways to paint. You've got this! :)
Yeah Cutting the edges with a 2” or a 2.5” is usually what we do first… frankly, I think it’s what every painting crew does since the roller guys can just roll without worries/issues Some use cheap tape for some parts but I haven’t seen anyone use tape & caulk yet 😂… I would imagine that even DIY painters just get Green Frog Tape since it’s pretty good
Im clueless with this stuff. I just painted my bathroom walls then realised shit I need to paint the ceiling. I keep getting lines even w tape , now realising it's because the ceiling is super textured.. And the baseboard has a gap. I'll try caulk. Thank you
Or just cut it in by hand after painting for 30 years. Thats what i do, granted this will give the cleanest line you can achieve but it takes extra time and materials for that extra 5 percentage visual.
Why is it every time I use blue tape for cutting in I still get bleed over inside, behind the tape. When I pull the blue tape I have specs of pint the other paint behind it why is it happening? I apply pressure to make sure it's adhered to the wall.
If you’re someone who acc paints you know the corner where the baseboard and the wall meet is literally a guide for you 😭 not to mention who paints walls after trim? I’ve always done walls then baseboard I feel like it’s way easier to get a straight line on the baseboard and if you do get any drips somehow u wouldn’t want to have the trim already painted idk maybe it’s just me. This guy doesn’t deserve any hate tho this a simpler way for people who aren’t professional painters
Everyone shitting on him like they're all professional painters. This is good for the casual diy person who doesn't have a lifetime of experience learning to paint perfect lines
I love this guy he takes his time teaches slowly so its easy to do. Sharing his craft not lieing or keeping secrets to boast himself. If each one teach one we would have more ppl working and less in need. Helping one another. ❤ #jalpenolover
I’ve been a painting contractor for 15 years and I can second what you are saying. Professionals are able to cut in with the white straight with ease. But the caulking trick with the body color works just fine to for the average person. Nice job jalapeño!
Well, I think it would help if he puts the tape since the beginning on the baseboard, then the cualk, then let the caulk dry n paint the wall. This is the best way for the DIY's.
@robert mayes yes, this is why caulk has to be wiped or cleaned then let it dry so it doesn't Crack when the paint dries. Also if caulk is still wet the brush will drag it .
@robert mayes if u r a pro. Did u consider that its better to let every material dry the proper time so it works better?? Do u knw that if u apply paint on wet calking there is a big chance that when ur paint dries n the caulk starts dryin( not the same day but in about 2 days) there will be a Crack on paint.
If caulk Is clean n let it dry ( the caulk he is using is the fast drying one 10 - 30 depending how much or thick the caulk, temperature etc) when paint it's still a little wet u can remove te tape or when it's completely dry just don't pull it hard make it slowly . U have experience n practice so u knw how to make ur projects work but to ppl who doesn't they have to be told more info so they don't make mistakes. Jalapeño solutions is not a pro but it's good.
Professional painter here please tape off the base first, then cut it and then roll it this way it doesn’t picture frame on you when you do your second coat picture frame meaning you see a darker outline around the edges, then you do on the wall
2 cuts 3 rolls you mean
i have the opposite effect it looks like not enough paint around edges.
@@Aldothejambo he certainly doesn't mean that... what a waste of time
What if you load just one side of your brush to feather the hard edge?
It’s due to the brush applying more paint than the rollers.
Brush first to roll out
If you roll first then brush the brush is too thick and never rolled out giving you the picture frame.
The thing is home owners can’t tell usually but if they’re wanting straight lines like this they probably don’t want the picture frame!
No matter how good you are are free handed at cutting. You can't never beat tape straight line.
It's not worth the extra time.
Facts, their acting like he’s throwing tape on the ceiling so he can cut the walls in
imagine you’re life being so boring and broke you argue about paint on a youtube video. lol
I guarantee you lines with a brush is straighter than this. You finish with painting the baseboards last. That's where you get your straight lines.
Homeowners use alex dap products. I've never seen a respected professional dap anything. I've been painting since 1996.
@habibimaya yup dap sucks plus a freehand line looks better then a tape line any day
The caulking after taping is for textured walls (especially deep textured walls). If you use just tape, the paint will just barely squeeze underneath the tape between the lumps and ridges of the texture not making it a super straight line. Of course, using a Purdy eliminates all that IF you know how to use it/cut properly. For everyone else, this is worth it.
Hey moron no it’s not research more stop talking about something you obviously know nothing about lol…
All these painters saying they can do perfect lines without the tape. I’ve been a contractor for 30 years and yes there are good painters but if you want it perfect you gotta tape and caulk it. Post videos of your work or STFU.
Lmao 30 years still using training wheels
Like I said post a video of you making a perfect line or STFU.
@@johncorbin5332lol 😆
I’m a painter and I never use tape, tape for me is just protection from roller spray. But fair play to the guy for doing it himself! ❤
@@gonzobonzo4480And it looks ugly and unprofessional underneath you. What's your point? Pride? ✴️
It took me a long time to learn to cut a line. It saved a lot of time. A quality brush is key. Im not a pro but I learned from one.
I'm from an old school professional family. However, I'm getting older and have high anxiety, I can appreciate this hack.plus, I love the smoothness of caulk on my finger. Lol
Damn Mary did you just you like a caulk on your finger...
@@jeemale9207 she loves the smoothness she said
I bet you do…
Lol freaky ass 😂😂
What did he say?
It looks amazing, the only thing I will say is, I he sould have introduced the caulking after painting to the corners where the base meets the wall, I would have brought out the base more and made it pop. And since it is the smaller part of the house, I think it deserves more attention
It is a textured wall, it would look haggard if you caulked after paint. I used to think the same thing when I worked for builders, they just want stuff done, don’t do it proper. You caulk, then paint.
@@Bozwald not if you clean the wall after with a tapered tile sponge. It's how I make my baseboards look perfect
@@jeshuaadams5869 Agree to disagree, the paint does the work of distinguishing the trim from the wall, (assuming it’s painted baseboard. Caulk is not meant to be seen, especially if the trim isn’t white.
In the amount of time it takes to set this up you could've just learned how to cut properly. I learned in about 20 minutes. It's not hard, just need to be patient. And nowadays there are plenty of videos online teaching how to properly cut a line. I had to learn literally on my first day as an apprentice in a client's house. It was either learn how to do it now, or don't come back tomorrow
Love your videos, don’t listen to these haters there’s always another way to do something, it looks great
Just a quick note To all who attemp this method easiest way to achieve it is if you make sure you see the edge of the tape threw the chalking that way you know it ain't to thick because you can mess it up if the chalking is to thick great method
Lol you moron wtf are you talking about clearly you have done no type of finishing in your life hahhaha
Thank you bro! Your the best! God bless!
Definitely appreciate that tip i got a few guys at work that are just starting to paint and im always having to come back n back to explain things and what to do n what not to do with the brush or roller this will definitely hit home run for them tho thanks appreciate it ...,
In my opinion, pull push paint strap turn twist 55 degrees twist damp caulk push remove cha cha cha
Hey, what song is that? Sounds great.
I am not a pro but experimented with taping and cutting. In most cases if you have steady hands, cut. Paint always bleeds even with tape and sometimes its even uglier than a non steady hand.
How long do you wait after caulking to paint? And how long after painting to pull the tape?
Ideally you wait for the caulk to dry before painting over it.
When I saw u pull out the tape I rolled my eyes, but the caulk was actually 200 IQ
Good videos. I'm just wondering where you live and work that all the walls have texture. Where I am, textured wall we're left that back in the 80s and popcorn ceilings we're gone by 2010
And that was absolute hell in 2010 too!! You walk in and almost duck down to miss those god awful monstrosities hanging from the ceiling... texture and popcorn should have been gone by, well, they should have never, ever been invented in the first place... yuk.
Yeah in the UK it was woodchip paper and Artex. I hope it never makes a comeback here
He lives in the Western United States where they still do that
@@andrejslv4192 Uhhh, not sure who or in what armpit town, but here in Colorado, we don’t see new homes with these nightmarish accents!
@@leerob2403 I painted houses all over Denver and the surrounding area tons of textured walls
As a professional, I only use frog tape because without a doubt it’s the best in the business. You can use blue tape if you know what you’re doing, but even if you know what you’re doing, that stuff is unforgivable and is prone to problems over the better solution.
Great job man.. To everyone on here… It’s all about the end results! It doesn’t matter and client will never care how you got there! Use all the tools that help you accomplish your goal:)
15 years experience professional here ….. rule #1 don’t use tape… don’t paint the wall to the base…. Paint the base to the wall…. Rest of the trim paint the wall to the trim…. It to time consuming to tape baseboards… or try to cut the wall to the base… you will get straighter lines if you just use the old school way.
I'm a painter and your videos are Kool bro . 😎
Amazing 🤩 I do it all the time a painter 👩🎨 gave me the idea 💡 u can also use yellow masking tape
Or you could use a caulking tool?
Do you wait for the paint to dry completely before removing the tape or do you do it while it still wet ?
Let it setup for a little bit, you've got about 15 minutes working time with the caulking, remove it before then. Don't let it dry or you'll get paint tares
@@jcluttrellthanks
Very nice work!
I like tape depending where the work is. Looks good man
Have u ever tried cutting the caulking nozzle straight and pushing the caulking tube forward rather the plulling it if u hold the gun at the right angle the nozzle tools the caulking and requires almost no re-working
Nope that's dumb you have to work the caulk no matter what
@@andrejslv4192 how do you know its dumb if you haven't tried. If you dont have the skill i understand why you might get defensive and call it dumb when u have never even tried it. You will use less then half the material the end result looks better and your finger or tools dont get covered in caulk something your probably use to.
Ever do any videos on where/how to cut open a tube of calking?
It’s called a knife edge. Eliminates all the tedious prep work of taping and caulking.
We know what a knifes edge is… you ever heard of other methods? These techniques didn’t come out of nowhere , lemme guess you paint every single day and do it for a living
That looks sharp,
How long do you wait to paint after you put the caulking ? Excellent video, thanks.
I love that you share your skills! Boom!😎👍
Very good explanation! Been looking through loads of videos for this. Thank you! 🙌
ETA: do you usually paint the walls first and skirtings second, or other way round? Sorry if obvious - not a professional painter here just trying to sort my flat on a shoestring budget. Thank you! 🙏
That's really nice.
Do you wait for the caulk to dry before you paint the wall AND is the baseboard already painted or do you to thr baseboard last?
Whats that color called? Thanks for the tips
Good job. But do u cut the edges first then roll the wall last. Or not.
Or it's my wall I'll do what ever I want.
This is a great way to do accent walls as well, don't let the paint dry completely before pulling the tape
Looks great man! I tape when painting wall to base to, if the top of the base is wide enough.
Do you do this 2x for 2 coats? Or just 1 heavy coat?
It doesn’t matter what you do as long as it delivers perfect results. And to all the lame “painters” that laugh at people that use clever methods to provide great finish product best believe they are bitter haters that they didn’t think of it first
Sweet! Thanks!!
Great hack I think I try this with my frog tape. 🙌🏾🙌🏾🙌🏾
Don't do it bro you're better off putting the frog tape and sealing it with a five and one or a spatula the caulking shrinks and after you paint it it it cracks because of the caulking shrinking
Is the caulking just to fill in any possible gaps?
What was its purpose?
Niiiice, I been taping wrong. Thanks for the lesson bro
Mr jalapeño you helped me through my rehab finishing work. Thank you for what you do!!! No joke
I tape and just paint the tape in get perfect lines but don't have to worry about caulk
Keep on with the hustle!! Great 👍
Yellow frog tape pre moist with semi moist rag then caulk frog tape adhesive expands through moisture the caulk after you pre expand the adhesive will create a razor line
Quick question, does anyone know, do you usually paint the walls first and skirtings second, or other way round? Sorry if obvious - not a professional painter here, just trying to sort my flat on a shoestring budget. Thank you! 🙏
Do you let the caulk dry before painting?
I'm starting a whole-house interior painting project and you can bet your sweet hippie that I'm going to use tape to get nice, straight lines. Thanks for sharing!!!
How long do you wait before painting over the caulk or can you paint right on top? And how long u too you relive the tape? Google says the opposite of all the videos I’ve been seeing
Is the caulk allowed to fully dry or its wet when you paint?🤔
What is a good hourly rate to charge customers?
I'm just starting out
Nice job😊
****Ok ok I've seen enough!! I HAVE NOW SUBSCRIBED!!! GREAT GREAT GREAT 👍 VIDEO!!! THANKS!!!
You can paint directly on the caulking? I always left it to dry first... 🤦
how long is "a little bit" exactly?
as in "wait a little bit then peel off the tape"
which do you paint first the wall or molding?
So what’s the purpose of the caulking? Would you caulk between the base boards and the wall for the whole house? I want to paint my house but have found that baseboard connected to the wall aren’t as smooth or have these small imperfections when taping
I don’t understand. Does the caulk come off when he peels the tape? If the caulk stays then the line is only as straight as the tape he put down.
Jalapeño solutions are the best solutions ever
How much time is "little bit"?
I love watching your helpful tips on diy, but what would be really helpful is that at the end of your video shorts you actually took a three second time frame to show the labels on the materials that you are using like the caulks and whatever, because in all of these videos I have noticed that they moved too fast to get a screenshot of what product I need to buy at the store to do this job at home myself. Thanks! Otherwise, you're doing great and I love watching your tips and hints thank you!!
Nice job bro 👍
The amount of pennies per foot painters commenting here is alarming, everybody claiming they can cut clean lines, doesn’t use caulk.. blah blah blah. Elevate your shit, the best painters absolutely use caulk, and tape. Maybe not always like this, but on almost any given job it’s there.
@john dunne probably why no one wants an Irish paint job, you wouldn’t get work here bud. Go to a million dollar house, or any of the houses I’ve worked in over the years, you’d be cleaning all the specs off of the floor and trim without tape.
Oooo my fave... Tank green
Check out the 180 Tape Holder! If you do lots of masking this is a time saver.🔥🔥🎉🎉🎉
If your painting over the caulk and the tape creates the line, why do you caulk at all?
Bro thank you for your hard work and hacks. Keep ‘em coming
This man is a masyer, y'all dissing him are just jealous.
This your first day painting?
I always forget about this method until after I've already finished doing it the hard way
This method is the hard way… price wise at least… you’re better off either buying a stiff brush and taking your time to properly cut OR get some Green frog tape that does this “trick” as well
@carlosf9278 yeah I just cut it with a brush and as long as I take my time it ends up great. this technique can work great for doing straight lines on textured surfaces,
Good video mate
As a painter who still feels this is a trade... I can just cut that baseboard in with a brush no tape..there is a time and place for tape caulking
How do you go by removing old caulking?
This would make work go by so fast I’ma give it a try thanks for the tip
Always trim before you roll. Way less brush marks that way.
Trim? Like do the trim first? I've never painted lol please explain! I gotta do my living room soon
@@lyssakate Yep, so when you trim with a brush, it leaves brush marks, unlike a roller. If you roll first, when you trim you'll get brush marks at least a few inches wide. But if you trim first, you can come back with a roller and roll close to your trim which covers most of the brush marks. It's pretty easy to roll within an inch or less of the trim. Also, make sure to remove all outlet/light switch covers before you paint, that way you don't have to try painting around them. Anyway, there are other ways to do it, this is what works for me. If you've never painted before I would suggest watching a couple RUclips videos first, as there are different ways to paint. You've got this! :)
You mean cut first
@@danmitchell357 Sorry yep 👍
Yeah Cutting the edges with a 2” or a 2.5” is usually what we do first… frankly, I think it’s what every painting crew does since the roller guys can just roll without worries/issues
Some use cheap tape for some parts but I haven’t seen anyone use tape & caulk yet 😂… I would imagine that even DIY painters just get Green Frog Tape since it’s pretty good
Im clueless with this stuff. I just painted my bathroom walls then realised shit I need to paint the ceiling. I keep getting lines even w tape , now realising it's because the ceiling is super textured.. And the baseboard has a gap. I'll try caulk. Thank you
You GO👏
Mr. Jalapeño, you do get a lot of " I could do it better comments " from the keyboard know-it-alls.
Everyone thinks they don't need tape, until they make 1 tiny mistake, then the regret sets in. And you're wiping spots off baseboards with acetone.
@@jordanlong00 if you use latex wipe them right then no acetone needed.
I would say, constructive criticism, but yeah, some commenting may have not picked up a paint brush? 🤦♂️🤷♀️
@@ikeepitshoWhat's constructive from know it alls? Being sloppier with a bigger ego? 😂
@@shawnr771No. Just use tape. It's better and more efficient. Use your head.
That looks fantastic! I'm going to try this method. I really like the look of the caulking technique...very neat! Thanks!
Man that paint reminds me of the early 2000.
How long before I remove the tape
There's a few ways. This is nicely done still.
Great job
Or just cut it in by hand after painting for 30 years. Thats what i do, granted this will give the cleanest line you can achieve but it takes extra time and materials for that extra 5 percentage visual.
That green is the next trend
Excellent thanks👌👌👌👌👌👌👌
Pull trim away from the wall. Paint with a nice pointed angled brush then pound it back on once dry.
Why is it every time I use blue tape for cutting in I still get bleed over inside, behind the tape. When I pull the blue tape I have specs of pint the other paint behind it why is it happening? I apply pressure to make sure it's adhered to the wall.
Have you bought stock? I’m guessing you did in the 3M tape company lol I don’t use much tape I’ve been painting for 40 years.
If you’re someone who acc paints you know the corner where the baseboard and the wall meet is literally a guide for you 😭 not to mention who paints walls after trim? I’ve always done walls then baseboard I feel like it’s way easier to get a straight line on the baseboard and if you do get any drips somehow u wouldn’t want to have the trim already painted idk maybe it’s just me.
This guy doesn’t deserve any hate tho this a simpler way for people who aren’t professional painters
I've got to paint all my trim + walls, I'm going to try this method.
Did u try it yet? It work?
Nicely done... You have to show all the Amateur's CAULKING is an ART
I could cut in trim so good I don’t even need to use tape
The caulk also bridges the gap inder the tape so dont get bleeding
Great hack bro thanks 👍🏽