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Bathroom, peeled wallpaper, need to texture n paint

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Help:

My step mother is 70 and on good happy pills and painkillers. She got it in her head that she wanted to peal off the wallpaper in her bathroom and paint the plaster walls lastnight, The wallpaper was the only thing she didnt like everything alse is fine and in good shape. She unplugged the fartfan, cranked up the hotwater in the shower and steamed up the room good then peeled off the 70's? foil type wallpaper. I'm not versed in wallpaper at all but what is left is a layer of paper backing and glue, we tried a steamer and remover in another spot and all it does is ball up the fiber of the paper. Luckily the ceiling is smooth plaster.

I did a google search and searched here and what I saw said to use oil based primer to seel the paper and then shoot texture......My question is are they talking about a conversion primer like zinser123 or are we talking real oil base primer?

Im a little confused ,I know water based materials do not adhere to oil bases, Ive wiped enuff paint and mud off oil based trim and cabinents to know its not good adheasion so am I missing something?

Idealy my plan now is to mix a little silica in zinzer123 and roll the walls.....let set a few days (address any bubles) Then shoot knockdown texture , prime, then paint.

Any suggestions?
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Help:

My step mother is 70 and on good happy pills and painkillers. She got it in her head that she wanted to peal off the wallpaper in her bathroom and paint the plaster walls lastnight, The wallpaper was the only thing she didnt like everything alse is fine and in good shape. She unplugged the fartfan, cranked up the hotwater in the shower and steamed up the room good then peeled off the 70's? foil type wallpaper. I'm not versed in wallpaper at all but what is left is a layer of paper backing and glue, we tried a steamer and remover in another spot and all it does is ball up the fiber of the paper. Luckily the ceiling is smooth plaster.

I did a google search and searched here and what I saw said to use oil based primer to seel the paper and then shoot texture......My question is are they talking about a conversion primer like zinser123 or are we talking real oil base primer?

Im a little confused ,I know water based materials do not adhere to oil bases, Ive wiped enuff paint and mud off oil based trim and cabinents to know its not good adheasion so am I missing something?

Idealy my plan now is to mix a little silica in zinzer123 and roll the walls.....let set a few days (address any bubles) Then shoot knockdown texture , prime, then paint.

Any suggestions?
You may be having trouble getting the steam to penetrate the wall paper's plastic film covering. I haven't done a lot of that work but most of the time there's a first layer of plastic you have to peel off. Then you soak the paper -15-20 seconds per 12" square. Start at the top and let the water work itself down the wall.

You could also try the old score and dif wall paper remover. Some people love the stuff some hate it. I've always steamed so I can't say either way.

As for primer I wouldn't mix anything into it. It dries fast anyway. I guess if I wasn't going to strip the walls I would pop bubbles. Spackle or even float them all out. Sand, prime, paint.
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I'd suggest you do whatever's needed to get the paper off.

Painting over wallpaper in a bathroom is a recipe for (sooner-or-later-on) problems.
all remnants of wallpaper, backing, and glue should be removed for a clean job. i've stripped tons of paper and the way we do it that works every time is as follows. 1st get a bottle of dif liquid not gel! 2nd Pour into pump garden sprayer and fill with very hot water. then spray the entire wall and saturate.
the trick is to keep it hot and wet. dont scrape yet. soak it again. you will start to see the paper bubble and separate from the wall and should be able to pull most of it with ease. keep in mind hot and very wet and you will have no problems. if you need to scrape do it carefully with a smooth tool like a 6" mud knife and be carefull not to damage wall. after all paper has been removed you should wash the walls real good with hot water until you cant feel any glue. failure to remove glue can make paint bubble and fail. :thumbsup:
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also use an oil based primer and seal it good before your finish paint.
that will protect you from glue residue that remains. :thumbsup:
I use hot water mixed with amonia to remove the paper then prime with Guardz to seal up any glue residue, it is waterborne and low odor.
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