To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Ceiling texture?

cdkoch

Member
Joined
May 2, 2011
Messages
9
I'm finishing up the drywall in my attached 3 car garage. A buddy says that knockdown texture on the ceiling adds a nice finishing touch, and hides some of the imperfections (it's my first time taping and mudding, so there are definitely some). I talked to a proffesional drywall guy who said every customer he's done knockdown in the garage for has wished they didn't do it. He contradicted my buddy by saying that it will make imperfections easier to see. He also said that the exhaust fumes make the cieling turn black after a couple years. My buddy has done knockdown in 2 garages and has never had that issue. Anyone have an opinion on whether I should texture the cieling or not? Also, what type of paint finish would you reccomend (flat = less obvous imperfections, but less reflective for light, less durrable(?); gloss = more obvious imprefectsion, better light reflectiveness, more durrable)?
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

ddawg16

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 11, 2008
Messages
21,005
Location
S. California
Comprimise.....

1st Option would be to use textured paint. Here is a pic of what mine looked like.

DSCN7356.jpg


And how it looks from a distance relative to the walls.

DSCN7351.jpg


On the walls, I did not use a texture...instead, I used a heavy knap roller....so it has a bit of a orange peel look to it....you can see some defects...but then again, most walls end up being covered with stuff...so your typically not looking at much paint.

If I had it to do over again....I would take some mud (the stuff you tape with), thin it down with water so it's a bit thicker than paint...and then rolled that on with a heavy knap roller. Then prime and paint.

The problem with knock down is that if you ever have to go back and patch it....it's a ***** to match up.
 

Falcon67

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 11, 2009
Messages
18,371
Location
Merkel, TX
Having been forced to repair knockdown recently and do some drywall work in general on a house, I will be using a coarse nap roller and just paint on my shop ceiling. Texture is a PITA. It's a shop, not for display in Better Homes & Gardens. I want easy up and if some carburetor in storage up there slides out of a box and pokes a hole in the ceiling (or ******* picks up a 6' piece of conduit and scrapes the ceiling ;) ) , easy repair.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

jcp907

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 11, 2008
Messages
167
Location
Seminole County, FL.
I did orange peal from a spray gun. Easy to duplicate for repairs. Hides some imperfections. I have some plywood that transitions to sheetrock and used bondo instead of tape compound...it didn't hide that. I should have spent more time on sanding, but I was in a rush to get it done, and it is a garage, afterall. I'll have weld spatter, dings, marks from dragging stuff..go with what is easy and you have the tools to duplicate if repairs are made.
 
OP
C

cdkoch

Member
Joined
May 2, 2011
Messages
9
Thanks for all of the suggestions. I think I'll just go the heavy knap roller route and skip the texturing. Sounds like any repairs are tough to do with knockdown. I'll probably spend a little more time cleaning up the spots that are really noticable and then prime and paint. Is a flat ceiling paint the way to go, or would a semi-gloss be better (light reflection?)? I'm planning on putting some light bars up (T8's?...haven't done much research on this yet), so I'm not sure how much of the ceiling is going to be visible. Bottom line, I'd just like it to not look like **** when I'm done.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom