How do i put together this cut-out on my walls.? i just moved surrounded by to my new home and me and...

i just moved surrounded by to my new home and me and my lil bro be playing around and made a hole on the wall its coverd right now near my fish tank but i want to know how to make it look close to this so that i can finish fixing trhe wall... i already fixed the hole and ive got the paint
Answers:    That's one of the 'knockdown' type of texture. Paint alone will not do the trick.

That texture was originally sprayed onto the wall next to a hopper gun, and then someone run a taping stick over it, to smooth it out just a bit.

You CAN repair this short a hopper gun, but it takes some artistry, and practice. You requirement a little united compound... you can purchase it in a small tub, already mixed up.

The trick will be recreating the texture stencil. I would suggest that you start with a couple of sponges.. different size holes contained by the sponge, or even a plastic bag (bread pod turned inside out, for example, and crumpled up a bit). What you want to do, is get the mud onto the wall contained by a somewhat spotty fashion... not completely smooth. You will want to practice on some cardboard to obtain the feel of it. Once you enjoy some drywall mud daubed onto the wall, endow with it about a minute or two, and insubstantially, run a wide putty run through over it.

You can alter the finished look by using different kinds of applicators... sponge, wadded up backpack, rags, even a paint brush, and how sturdy you press with the putty wound. This takes some practice. Most texture repairs are 'botched' because the repair personage didnt take adequate time to work on it, to get the technique right. If you have to rework a whole wall, I would insist on using a hopper gun... but since this is just one hole, that would be more trouble than it is worth, as it take some practice getting the application to match too.

If the first time you try it on the wall (practice on cardboard first) it doesnt look right, freshly scrape it past its sell-by date and try it again. I've made a LOT of texture repairs in my business, and can give an account you it is possible to match ANY texture, if you hold enough restraint, and practice.

By the way... after you attain the texture itself to match, you will want to put a coat of primer over it, earlier painting. If you don't apply the primer first, your patch will train up a different color, even if it is the exact same paint.

Have Fun
it look like paint be put down, then dab with a duster, then when it dried did alike thing, next more paint, then wipe maybe similar to 10 times??