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Liner

"Liner is to walls as oil is to engines."
There are two types of liners. Bridging liner and
blankstock. If your walls are so rough that patching and sanding would comprise a
tremendous amount of work, then bridging liner is your best alternative. Blankstock
liner is a thin paper pulp that is used under expensive wallcoverings that require special
handling. You should not try to install the products yourself.
Bridging
liner is most commonly used over paneling. Most paneling can be covered with a heavy-duty
liner without having to fill the grooves with spackling compound. Of course, even liner
has it's limits. Bulges and bows in the walls will not disappear and very wide paneling
gaps may have to be filled if your finish paper is a thin product. Real wood paneling with
the wide "V" grooves may require spackling to keep the paper from sinking in.
Before
installing your liner clean the oils and waxes off the paneling, sand with 100 grit
sandpaper, prime with top quality primer (allowing a day or two of drying time), and size
with a ready-mixed acrylic sizing (allow overnight drying). The priming and drying times
are critical for some wallcoverings that will pull away from a low tack surface as they
dry.
Install your heavy-duty (bridging) liner
with a ready-mixed, heavy-duty vinyl adhesive. Allow this to dry overnight and then size
the liner with a top-quality, ready-mixed acrylic sizing. Most bridging liners are so
porous that they must be sized to get your wallcovering to adhere to them.
If this seems like a lot of prep work, you're right---it is. The
alternative is adhesion failure. If you think it costs a lot to do this much work to
change the look of the room, compare it to the cost of taking out the paneling, installing
new or repairing the old sheetrock (which should be primed and sized anyway), and you can
see that the only cheaper alternative is to just paint the paneling. We all know how
attractive that is.
Frequently, liner is rolled very tight. You can take out some of the
force of this curl by reverse-rolling the liner in the opposite direction. Leave the liner
reverse-rolled and let it set for at least an hour. This will relax the tension of the
curl and make the product easier to handle on the wall.
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