Drywall repair can be carried
effectively with raising a lot of dust. (Drywall is otherwise called wallboard,
plasterboard, gypsum board, or sheetrock.). Drywall openings can extend from
little breaks to expansive gaps, yet most repairs are simple and cheap to
alter. Apparatuses and materials required:
Tools: the drywall saw, reciprocating saw, electronic
stud finder
Materials: drywall corner bead, string, fiberglass
drywall tape
Drywall readymade patch:
These can be easily found at hardware stores and
building. A readymade patch is mostly employed in fixing small holes, or spots
that do not suffer a lot of impact. But if the spot is may be behind the door
and the knob will regularly hit against it then a a total drywall
repair is needed.
Clean up the edges of the hole:
You will want to trim the hole to the size of the
patch that is going to replace it for easy compatibility with the wall.
Clean and dry the repair area to allow maximum adhesion.
Moisture can be a real pain to adhesive force. After
cleaning the edges of the hole, you should let it dry because you do not want a
significant amount of moisture in your drywall patch. Next, you may apply the
patch to the wall and ensure to smooth the taped edges to get rid of air
bubbles.
Then spread a thin topcoat of joint compound over
the patched up area surrounding the spot. This is meant to create a smooth
transition between the patch and the surrounding wall it is taped on. There
will be an unattractive look at this point, but that is just the look of work
in progress; the patch backing will just be lying on the existing drywall, and
the edges will be rough. Now, the beauty comes as you learn to disguise these
edges and make them appear to vanish. Here you will have to employ a compound
around the patch in such a way that the patch backing is blended gradually with
the rest of the wall. This takes some practice so you will need to be very
patient with yourself here. Most times it often requires more than a coat of
mud.
At this point a putty knife becomes your best tool
because all you will be doing at this point is making your patch blend with
your wall and the perfect tool for this task is the putty knife; a wider putty
knife allows you make smoother spreads.
If you do not
seem satisfied with your finish, its okay, just wipe off the blade, get it wet
and scrape on. Ensure you make the mud as smooth as you can make it, but don't
worry if it's not perfect. If after all these you still notice a certain
roughness in the work, be calm because you have the sand tool to help you
smoothen the wall by rubbing it vigorously against areas that do not look so
smooth.
If you now find satisfaction with the smoothness of
the wall you can allow it to dry, then you may apply any decorative finishing
like paint, wallpaper, etc.