"Slap brush" you mean stomp, crowsfoot or double crowsfoot?
Yes cut a line in the texture then scrape to it
"Slap brush" you mean stomp, crowsfoot or double crowsfoot?
Yes cut a line in the texture then scrape to it
Sigh, this project just got longer/messier. Scraping texture off every place the new drywall meets old - corners, ceiling and the single butt joint - is going to suck. Oh well, I suspected as much. Thanks for the advice and textured walls suck.
Maybe? Every time I have found a picture that seems to match my current texture, it seems to be called slap brush. All I know is it is put on with a brush:
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Last edited by mutt; 02-20-2020 at 10:35.
It's also called stomp. Slap brush is more of a category of texture that stomp, stipple, crows foot and double crowsfoot fall under. Stomp and stipple use the same brush with different pressure. Crows foot is a brush with the bristles running parallel to the wall surface. Double is 2 brushes attached to eachother.
https://www.homedepot.com/p/ANVIL-5-...2032/308729557
Here's the brush you need.
Buy a solid, non extension pole that you can reach all your spots with. You'll be beating it up so make sure it's not a cheap broom handle.
Buy a paddle mixer and mud in the bucket or a clean 5gal and a box of mud. Add about 1.5 liter of water per box of mud. Mix thoroughly with the paddle mixer.
If you have a small area, slap the brush on the surface of the mud bucket then on the wall hard enough to make the bristles bend. repeat until the entire surface is covered. It's best to break up inside corners into separate jobs for a beginner.
Larger area spray with a texture gun on the heaviest setting and coat the drywall, then smack the brush on the wall moving each hit. Best done with 2 people as loading a texture hopper alone is a pain.