The Best Way to Remove Wallpaper (& Why Wallpaper Is One of the Deadly Sins)

best way to remove wallpaper

After many hour scraping (and aching), it has come to my attention that to remove wallpaper means to be in battle. I feel like I need to give a general PSA about this: if you are considering using wallpaper, for the love of all that is good, DON’T.

Those pretty wallpapers that lure you in with cute songbirds and gold geometric designs are devils in disguise, tempting you to fall prey to their guile – don’t fall for it!

Because this is what happens:

 

Either you or someone else will pay for your wallpaper sins.

And this room has four layers of sins wallpaper.

Cause apparently even the past owners saw the error of their ways, but rather than acknowledging and taking down their mistake, they covered it up with another.

…and another

the first and oldest layer added by the original owners and my fave out of them all
…and another
2nd layer of wallpaper

…and another.

even the hot water pipes couldn’t escape being wallpapered

Then they added paint out of desperation.

 

This wall has, unsurprisingly, been my project this whole week.

There have been benefits however:

  • uncovering each layer of paper has been a look into each era of this house – very cool!
  • I’ve been catching up on podcasts
  • there’s been lots of ‘wax on, wax off’ and ‘paint the fence’ moves going on here, so soon I’ll be ready to fight the school bully

Remarkably, the method I’ve been using for taking down the paper has been a simple solution: half and half of hot water and vinegar in a spray bottle and a plastic scraper.

Yup, that’s it. It works amazingly well.

I even got a bit brave and made a video:


Stripping Wallpaper with Water & Vinegar from Draven on Vimeo.

 

Quick snapshot of the progress over the last few days:

 

20,378 hours later, this is what it looks like now:

 

…and this is what my plastic scraper looks like now:

wallpaper-removal-plastic-scraper

It used to have a straight edge.

A light at the end of the tunnel for sure with the walls. I’m also slowly working the glue off as you can see on the bottom-right side of the most current progress pic using a cotton tshirt rag and, you guessed it, hot water and vinegar.

Tack up another win for this water & vinegar combo for not only cleaning, but now… stripping wallpaper and glue.

Soon we’ll be turning our attention to the plaster. We have horsehair plaster and lath, and it’s in pretty awesome shape. Only areas along corners and edges such as around the window need patching, as well as the places where nails were from the shelving. The plaster is completely raw and was never painted, so we’ll have to use some Kilz primer on it before painting. If anyone has experience with patching horsehair plaster or Kilz primers, I’d love to hear from you in the comments below!

Since this post we’ve been working hard on the dining room (see pic below)! Catch-up by going here for “before” photos, and here for the demo day in our future dining room. Then jump ahead to where we start to really get the room back to its former Victorian roots, from plaster repair and paint to an antique chandelier and ceiling medallion!

dining room before and after

 

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best way to remove wallpaper


Shared On: bragworthythursday, creativityunleashed, thatdiyparty, totallyterrifictuesday, makeitprettymonday, inspirationmonday

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5 Comments

  1. Wow! You have been very hard at work! Much determination! I agree about not wallpapering. Just. don't! I have removed wallpaper from several different houses and I hate it! None has been as bad as yours though! Kudos to you!

    1. Oh my, having to do several houses is rough! Sounds like you showed determination yourself, as I think more than one house would do me in. We should start a "say no to wallpaper" campaign. ;)

  2. I’m with you on the wallpaper conclusion. I tried vinegar and water to no avail on the many layers of paper in my house but I think the newer glues are better (as in stickier). In those old houses I think they used homemade paste using flour. I resorted to a steamer which did the trick but it was still not easy. Without it the best I could do is 2 square inches at a time of a single layer, it was a nightmare.
    https://kitchenrenochestermere.blogspot.ca/2016/06/wallpaperugh.html
    and…
    https://kitchenrenochestermere.blogspot.ca/2016/06/the-great-coverup.html

    1. Interesting point about the different glues perhaps used! If the water & vinegar hadn’t worked, steaming was my Plan B. We still have one whole 90’s wallpapered room upstairs to do, but I’m going mental enough with our current projects, so it’ll be awhile yet before I touch that sanity-test-of-a-room. ;)