How do you paint touch-up spots on drywall? [solved]

I have a few spots that need to be touched-up (after having a drywall anchor removed, being gouged while moving furniture, etc).

I filled them with putty, sanded smooth, then painted a single coat with a small foam brush, but:

  1. The texture looks different from the rest of the wall
  2. The color looks a bit off, though maybe this is just because of the texture.

Any tips on how to handle these spots so they don't stick out?

83
1
possible duplicate diy.stackexchange.com/questions/1543/… - auujay 12 years ago
3 Answers Found

A couple of things could cause this:

  • the original surface was primed, and you didn't use any primer on the patches. Primer seals the surface, so changes how the surface absorbs paint.
  • the original surface was rolled, and you used a paintbrush. Rollers leave a slight orange-peel texture, whereas a paintbrush -- even the brush you used -- will leave a flat to slightly rippled texture.

More coats of paint will help too, but prime it first.

69
3
You can get small rollers, which might help in matching the texture. Can't really add much else to this answer. - chris 12 years ago
For completeness - you might also not have waited long enough. Sometimes paint takes a day or two to dry to it's final color. - Joel Spolsky 12 years ago
I second the "mini rollers" idea from chris. I recently removed a small shelf that the previous owners had installed, left some holes that I spackled, sanded and mini rolled. Can't see any differences now that it's dried and set. - user45 12 years ago

The difference you are seeing (like @Niall C. mentioned) is that the area you patched is very smooth from the paint brush but the rest of the wall is speckled from a roller. Possibly you also sanded the wall around the patch job too much and therefore removed the roller pattern that was previously there (making the smooth non-matching area larger and more apparent). Next time when patching a small spot, put on your spackle/joint compound and then you can use a sponge sanding block to remove any high spots (but without sanding too much to remove any of the roller pattern from around the hole). Then you can try and use a paint brush to get a match to the roller pattern by dabbing the area (instead of pulling full strokes) but you would definitely get a matching pattern by using a roller.

@Niall C. mentioned this in his answer but in my opinion priming small areas like you described is not necessary. If this is a larger area (maybe the gouge that you describe, then priming and a roller would be required to get a match).

57
0

How to do small touch ups without painting the whole wall!!

0
0

Answer this question

Share this Page

Click "Copy this Link" to copy page link to clipboard