Cutting contained by? What is the trick to "cutting in"? I other seem to any...

What is the trick to "cutting in"? I other seem to any get ceiling paint on the wall or wall paint on the ceiling. Or the paint contained by the corners just doesn't look like as the paint that is rolled on. Masking cartridge seems to support a little but, some peaint seem to leak lower than the tape or verbs off next to the tape. Do they engineer some kind of tool to serve with this?
Cutting contained by is doing around the ceiling, curved areas, and corners first, before rolling the larger flat areas. Roll up to the corners and ceiling juncture as closely as possible, but you may see a texture difference, it's freshly the way it is...you can receive a narrow roller or one of those fluffy shrunken rollers to get within the corners better.

Using good mask tape (the blue mode is my favorite, costs more but worth it) helps profoundly, but if you don't apply the masking cartridge correctly, paint will leak beneath. Use a rag to press it down firmly.

Always appropriate the tape bad when the paint is still wet, and at an angle, to maintain from pulling the paint off near the tape, or getting the paint on the surface you be trying to mask..

As near all this stuff, practice make perfect.
You inevitability a good edging paint brush. Use a smaller one too. And unsurprisingly, patience is other key.

Also, when using mask tape, you call for to cut it along the seam (like where the ceiling meet the wall) prior to pulling it off. Also form sure you're not waiting for the paint to completely dry prior to pulling it off.
DIY Doc is right something like painting the ceiling first and not worrying about ceiling paint getting on the walls. When adjectives in the walls to the ceiling, the two best things are practice and choosing the right brush. My favorite brush for that charge is the Purdy XL Dale, 2 1/2 inches wide. I almost never use mask tape when adjectives in. I hold never tried the paint pad edgers. I enjoy seen other culture use them and they don't hold enough paint to cover properly. The texture vanished by a brush and a roller will never quite meeting. To minimize the difference, make sure in that is enough paint on your brush. If the brush starts to drag, its time to dip it again. Do small areas. You want to roll up to that time the paint you brushed to cut in dries. You could try adding up Floetrol to the paint to extend the drying time and so it will level better. Last, a touch ceiling color on the top of the wall is less striking than wall color on the ceiling.


I PAINT, every time of my life, and CUTTING does niggardly an evolution is skills.

I suggest this, and use this technique in every errand.

Certainly the ceiling should be painted first, even sloppy, onto the walls by an inche or so. Unless you are adept, I suggest a paint pad beside wheels, allowing approx. 1/16 inch of a straight stripe with the wall color. The EYE will never copy that fraction, as celing color, but will defeinitely in bleeding wall color onto the ceiling.

Masking at a celing/wall cohesive is a waste.

Steven Wolf
freshly my two "sense"
Cutting and rolling 7 days a week.
Answers:    Paint from the top down -ceiling first, after walls.
The comments about ceiling white anyone less patent on walls than wall paint on ceilings is spot on.

I've tried cassette, wheeled pad, guards, little bitty rollers (and more) but I keep coming support to my 2" - 3" sash (angular) brushes... depending on how bad/rough the corner/texture is.
I like the Purdy extra-nylo - this isn't the best place to rescue money.... even for homeowners.

Keep your brush full
Don't worry more or less brushing the paint totally out.

This might be helpful:
http://www.purdycorp.com/dvd/play/wall

Remember, leniency is a virtue.
Slow... slow... slow...
that edging brush idea is worthy if you cant get the nack of that
a straight outskirts held up as a barrier and paint to straight lip
it has a wood button and a blade looks similar to a taping cut shorter handle wider blade
Use a smallish (inch and a half or so) which is duly flat - with a steady paw and a bit of practice you can paint a neat rank, letting the tips of the bristles 'feel' where the angle is and following that. Don't overload the brush and preserve it in suitable condition. I also cut in as I turn so that I am mrying up with the damp edge of the rollered nouns, and it tends to show smaller number than cutting within separately

Masking tape is too much of a faff, and rooms are not as precise as adjectives that; as you indicate they have drawbacks.

There is a gizmo, call a 'George' basically a sort of metal periphery or shield which you move along as you go. They enjoy been around for eons, but they want a bit of practice to use properly. They were originally to hold paint off chalice when painting window.