As I mentioned in my last post, removing painted on popcorn ceiling texture is one of the worst jobs I’ve done. Non-painted texture? That stuff is a walk in the park.
In the last week, I’ve removed popcorn ceiling from the upstairs bathroom, and from the main floor living/dining room. The former was not painted, the latter was.
Removing the non-painted (or lightly painted) popcorn ceiling is as follows:
- Take a large putty knife (8″ or so) and knock off the bigger popcorn
- Take a spray bottle or a garden sprayer and get the stuff as moist as you can without having it drip all over
- Let sit for 5 minutes or so
- Take the large putty knife and scrape off the goop
- Have a beer
Removing the heavily painted (and possibly multiple textured) popcorn ceiling is as follows:
- Have a beer
- Schedule a back/neck/shoulder massage for the day you plan to be done (add a day or two overage)
- Have a beer
- Find an ice scraper (the kind you use to remove ice from a driveway, about 6-8″ wide and with a 4′ or so handle), and sharpen up the edge
- Attempt to scrape off as much of the large popcorn as possible
- Take a garden sprayer and moisten the ceiling. It will only penetrate the areas you knocked off in the last step
- Wait 5 minutes
- Spray the ceiling again
- Wait 5 minutes
- Spray the ceiling again
- Wait 5 minutes
- Scrape away. You might not even get down to the plaster (or drywall) at this step. If not, repeat 6-11 again
- Have a beer
- Call it a night and repeat 1-13 over again until you finish it
If you can get your entire ceiling down to the plaster/drywall without settling for an inbetween, mad props to you. For the first area, I went down to the plaster. Of course, I didn’t think of the obvious things I’d find doing so. Things like cracked plaster, bad patch jobs, etc. If I had a few weeks to work on this, I would have taken all of the texture down to the plaster. However, the painter is here to work on it today or tomorrow so I had to settle for what I could. 90% of the ceiling is just scraped down as much as I could without breaking through to the plaster. It will be heavily textured again, but only about 50% of what it was before. Ideal? No, but it will work for now and will look much better than previously (hopefully).
Still no pictures. Sorry. I take the pictures, but I tend to write these posts away from the camera and computer. I will do my best to get them up here soon.