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Design

Ask the Audience: How Do You Feel About Plaster & Limewash Walls?

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Like all good design risks, I’m about to dance a fine line of dated/try-hard OR beautiful and textural…and before we all embarrass ourselves, I thought it was worth a conversation with 50k of my favorite friends.

As you might remember, nine years ago when we started the mountain fixer, I wrote a post about doing some moody wall colors for the bedrooms and this desire has not changed. I’m dying to get away from the all white wall trend (I’m not alone here either…Arlyn wrote a post waxing poetic on this exact topic yesterday) and the guest bedrooms in this house are the perfect place to do it. That’s not the risk. The risk is that I want more texture on the walls because there really isn’t a lot of interesting architecture in these guest rooms—no moldings, no wall paneling, no ceiling paneling, just really pretty wood windows (but only on one end) and beautiful wood flooring. The rest of the home is filled with amazing architecture, big dramatic ceilings, or special finishes that we are putting in but these guest rooms are simple as they are now. I don’t want to add paneling all over the walls or molding. I want these rooms to be edited, curated, uncluttered and just calm and simple (with the perfect everything) but still warm and interesting.

But this house is a 1960s totally renovated rustic Scandi-style chalet and I fear that plastering all these walls would, well, perhaps cost too much if done correctly. So that is concern #1: The Cost.

In the Portland house (bottom right corner of the below grid), my impulse was to go with a smooth flat finish not knowing that I was basically tripling the paint labor and materials cost of just going with a standard orange peel. Sure, I knew it would be more expensive but I don’t think I knew HOW much more (again, triple). Not only was the labor more but every time we had to adjust a junction box two inches, the sheetrock guys had to come back out to smooth coat it. Am I glad that we did this for this house? YES. VERY. VERY. VERY. GLAD. Those smooth walls feel fresh and high end and modern just like the house should. Was it the smartest decision to do on an investment property that we were trying to keep within budget and on top? Maybe not.

Let’s review with this little cheat sheet the different types of texture, in case you aren’t familiar with the “orange peel” term that I just threw out there. No, there aren’t orange peels cladding your walls; it is just a term that was generated to quickly talk about the texture that the walls have. Without going into too much of a backstory or financial lesson. Orange peel walls are dramatically more cost-effective than smooth flat finish walls because you can be a little quicker with the application and you won’t notice the little differences in everything once it is painted. It helps to hide everything with a texture whereas the smooth coat is the opposite. Every little tiny crack or imperfection will only be amplified once it is painted.

Wall Texture Options

Our budget isn’t endless (I haven’t looked at the budget in a while for the mountain house for fear of nausea, spontaneous hysteria, depression, anxiety, etc), but let’s just say we are trying to cut costs on finishes where we can. As a “smooth coat lover,” I approached my GC at the mountain house and he has convinced me to save money and time by doing a slight “hand” texture—not full plaster, but some in order to save money on smooth finish and instead use something that is more forgiving without going full orange peel.

Now, if you are scared, I was, too, but then he showed me pictures and I thought to myself, well, I like a textured wall when done well and in a color of my choosing then I think it would look pretty.  Our LA house (that’s my bedroom in the bottom left shot above) has 100-year-old plastered walls and I love it. The texture is subtle but adds just a little movement to the walls. This would be “Plaster-lite.”

So I started pinning the texture that I love. Nothing too Venetian or obvious. It’s my relatively firm belief that unless you live in a very old building (at least 80 years old) or a crumbling loft (I guess same rule) then be VERY careful about doing Venetian plaster or any sort of extreme faux finish as it will look well, “faux” and therefore could date itself pretty quickly. I’ve seen it done in new builds and depending on the architecture, it sometimes works, sometimes feels out of place. On a custom high-end build with groin-vaulted ceilings and grand archways and staircases, sure, but… just take heed otherwise.

In the office in my old home, we did a lime paint and it gave it a slight texture although, maybe even too slight (you honestly can’t really even see it here, but…it was there):

Emily Henderson Framebridge Art Ledge Brians Office Masculine Office Guy Green Plaid Rug Workspace Modern Eclectic 4
Photo by Tessa Neustadt for EHD | From: Custom Framing for Our Home Office With Framebridge

Also remember that the family room and living room fireplaces in the house are both plaster, as is the tile in the dry bar backsplash (you don’t know that yet) so there is kinda this element happening repeatedly in the house already. Bringing this texture into the bedrooms feels…natural and right and like it won’t be a huge departure from what we’re already doing. Well, I’m leaning more toward a limewash instead of a plaster which is a texture created by…well, Remodelista did a whole article on everything you need to know about limewash, and here’s how they put it: “An ancient house staple dating back to Roman times, limewash is made from limestone that’s been crushed, burned, and mixed with water to make a lime putty. The putty is aged and then thinned with water and colored with natural pigments. Limewash creates surfaces that are mottled and matte with a chalky texture something like suede. It lends a depth and luminosity to flat walls.” Chalky, nuanced texture? Oh yes, bring it on.

Jersey Ice Cream Co Traditional Bedroom
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Jersey Ice Cream Co., who designed the Lokal Hotel in Philadelphia but also are the geniuses behind SO many rooms we’ve shown you on this blog recently, have mastered the textured wall in a fresh, modern way. I think they’re using a Venetian plaster technique, rather than a limewash, but it feels like a hip grandma that also happens to dress REALLY COOL. Obviously, the “age” and “character” is there, but also, SO COOL.

Slate Blue Walls
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Here’s a close-up shot of some texture that is subtle but just enough to not feel totally flat. The color is moody without being like someone turned off all the lights and there are faint variations all over.

Dark Blue Textured Walls
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No surprise here, I love this blue. It’s so inky and the texture from the wall finish really catches the light. Can you imagine in one of the bedrooms with magical winter light streaming through the windows?

Sage Green Wall
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I can’t tell if this is actually just wallpaper…it might be? There’s a seam I spotted under the hanging aprons but it’s just another example of that really subtle tonal texture that makes things feel automatically more interesting than just a basic orange peel or smooth finish.

Pink Plaster Walls
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How pretty would this be in a little girl’s room (not to say pink is just for girls…it could go in the room anyone, of course), but a finish like this is something that is grown-up enough to stick around from crib to queen-sized bed. It’s a classic finish and therefore feels timeless no matter where it is used.

Gray Walls Living Room
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This feels very Belgian and if you’ve ever studied Belgian interiors, you know those people know what they’re doing over there. No one knows how to create a warm, refined, super chic yet rustic (and kind of primitive but also modern!) look like them. My children would definitely get splinters in their little supple baby feet from these floors, but those walls are a different story. So subtle, so good. The color looks kind of different everytime your eye moves, but that’s what gives it so much depth (and probably wouldn’t cost thousands of galleons to patch if whoever hung that art made a few mistakes along the way…)

Blue Bedroom
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If you’ve been following along like a good, dedicated daily reader, you might remember this shot from the mountain house color post I did all the way back in February when I was still young and green about this whole project (okay, I’m still excited, now that walls are going up and the next fun phase is about to begin). I thought it was really pretty and soothing and inviting back then, and still do now. I originally saved this photo for the color inspiration, but it also has a “wait, is that right?” kind of texture that feels like a wall that’s been around the block a few times…in a good way. Most likely it is due to the fact that it looks like it is a bedroom in an old Parisian apartment flat—complete with beautiful old walls. But the texture is still there and the movement happening on the walls is beautiful.

I recently met with Portola Paints & Glazes, a local LA company that mixes up really beautiful, subtle, quality paints and also offers a handful of custom glazes and finishes (like plaster and limewash), and I’m really excited about possibly working with them for this (more on that later).

3x3 Grid Portola Lime Wash1
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Their limewashes range from subtle (like that one in the middle) to a little more suede-y and varied. I’m definitely leaning more toward the “hushed” texture. I don’t think I need the walls to scream LOOK HOW COOL AND HIP I AM, but more like “hey, lean in…take a look…aren’t I beautiful in a way that makes you think I don’t know how good looking I am?”

What I’m not really after is something SUPER varied and kind of splotchy, like these:

Blue Textured Plaster Walls
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Blush Plaster Walls
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That look is beautiful when in the right space and might be just right for someone, but not for me. There’s something kind of…unfinished about that first blue shot (which works perfectly for this vignette) but again not perfect for the mountain house. And there’s just a bit too much variance in color of the grays and pinks in the second shot. I love it in this space (heck, it is one of my favorite restaurants here in LA and is gorgeous inside), but again probably not right for the mountain house. We want subtle, calm and simple texture.

So…now I throw it to you guys…what do you think? Is this too “trendy” and something I should just avoid (even though I definitely will be doing some kind of texture because, like I said, smooth finish is TRIPLE the labor cost) or you’re all like YES, YES about it? Let me know your thoughts on the finish you think we should go with (more subtle or more varied) in the comments, as always. I’m leaning toward more subtle in a rich color for the guest bedrooms (and might even consider a limewash finish in other spaces…maybe the whole house), but would love to hear what you guys are thinking.

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Lulu
5 years ago

“Yes, yes!” All kidding aside, as someone who is known to change where art is positioned even when no mistakes are made, the thought of a finish whose repair avoids a coma inducing cost is amazing.

Curious to know whether you’d apply the same texture across all the guest rooms and whether applying more than one “round” of paint (in the case of future repainting) would require retexturing to achieve the lovely subtle gradients shown above.

Admin
EHD
5 years ago
Reply to  Lulu

Exactly, that’s why the ‘slight hand’ texture was appealing to us since we will change things up now and again so it is easier to repair than the smooth coat finish. Still debating whether to limewash the entire house or just the bedrooms so TBD on that.

Alyssa
5 years ago

We have some cement-plastered walls in our mid century, rustic farmhouse in upstate New York. Backstory- It was originally an 1800s farmhouse that has a fire in 1969, and was rebuilt as a mid-century rustic cabin in 1971. We’re at the end of 3 years of renovation, and we ultimately kept most of the cement-plastered walls (our various contractors hadn’t seen this technique done residentially) and original reclaimed panel walls (very Jersey ice cream co, but original and we’ve grown to love it). All of that to say, having lived with it now for 3 years, and my husband has for 25 (we bought the house from my in laws)- you’re very limited if you ever want to repaint or change your mind. Depending on the level of texture, it’s harder to clean. I don’t even know how we would repair it if we ever needed to. In rooms we took down to the studs we just got rid of it, which was mostly the kitchen. If you’re going to be using the house for ongoing content creation and need to be able to change things easily a year or two from now, even 5, I would go with a… Read more »

Laura
5 years ago

Hi, I was wondering if you still offer design services via skype/email/whatever and looked on the “services” tab, but the page is broken.

Admin
EHD
5 years ago
Reply to  Laura

At the moment we are just focusing on the blog and this project, we can refer you someone if you email hello@emilyhendersondesign.com and tell us more about what you are looking to do.

laura
5 years ago
Reply to  EHD

Thanks!

Giulia
5 years ago

“As you might remember, nine years ago when we started the mountain fixer, I wrote a post about doing some moody wall colors for the bedrooms and this desire has not changed.”

I guess this renovation looks like it’s taking forever 😉

Admin
EHD
5 years ago
Reply to  Giulia

it certainly feels like forever but now that the drywall is getting finished up I can see the finish line finally.

Giulia
5 years ago
Reply to  EHD

I believe you! It was just an innocent joke on the “nine years ago”, but maybe you were already joking on that years/months 🙂

KK
5 years ago

I guess wall texture is a regional thing? I’m in Canada (eastern) and every house has smooth finish walls. I don’t even know where I would go to get orange peel applied or who would do it. Even the cheaper starter homes or flipped houses have smooth finish. Sheetrock is just the only option. I guess we’re lucky!

Amy
5 years ago
Reply to  KK

I was thinking the same thing! I’m from Central Kentucky (developed, urban area) and nobody here has textured walls, it’s completely unheard of unless you own a 1800-early 1900s home. I’m shocked by the texture cost savings, because it would actually cost me more to have textured walls (I’m currently building a home) simply because nobody around here does it. I find the regional differences in construction costs fascinating.

Christa
5 years ago
Reply to  Amy

Orange peel walls are definitely a thing in California. Basic builder grade wall finish from 1970s on through 1990s found in crappy apartments across the state. It was cheap to build that way (and it looks cheap!) especially when painted a glossy beige.

Leah
5 years ago
Reply to  KK

Same in Australia. Weird, huh?

Bev
5 years ago
Reply to  KK

Definitely a weird regional thing. I grew up in Michigan where all the walls are smooth, and when renovating my house in California was blown away by how much pricier that option is. I was lucky enough to have my dad come out and teach us how to do it ourselves. A long weekend worth of work and we now have beautiful smooth walls.

Molly
5 years ago
Reply to  Bev

That’s because in California contractors are trying to sell everyone on an unnecessary additional skim coat. Getting that skim coat perfectly smooth is difficult and therefor expensive. In Michigan, a level 4 finish is considered standard.

Admin
EHD
5 years ago
Reply to  KK

Orange peel finish is definitely not as common as it was during the 80s/90s when this house might have last been remodeled. There are a couple options how you can finish drywall and smooth coat is the fanciest (most expensive) of the options, so yes you are lucky!

Kelly
5 years ago
Reply to  KK

ok now i have orange peel questions. i *thought* orange peel was just what you ended up with if your painter used not great quality rollers and not great quality paint on your Sheetrock. And then it gets compounded over the years if the same approach to painting is taken. but it’s actually a deliberately applied texture? I’ve had a lot of painting done over the years but no one’s ever offered ‘orange peel’ texture as an option.

EHD team please enlighten us!

RubberChickenGirl
5 years ago
Reply to  Kelly

I think the spray/splatter sheetrock mud onto the wall and then skim coat downward with a trowel to create a mottled, ie orange peel, texture.

Lydia
5 years ago
Reply to  KK

I’m in Canada too and flat finish walls are standard. I think they’re actually easier to repair because you don’t have to match pre-existing texture. Smooth texture is easy! I can easily fix small/large holes myself with pre-mixed mud, putty knife, and sandpaper (and drywall if needed).

Anon
5 years ago
Reply to  Lydia

That’s my experience too–it’s super easy! I’m baffled. Orange peel only exists to hide builder mistakes. It’s an extra step…would be quicker and cheaper to build correctly in the first place. For very minor spots, sandpaper and spackle are all you need. I want to move back to the South, where all the walls are smooth!

Lisa
5 years ago
Reply to  KK

In Canada, our walls are typically “smooth” with no orange peel texture because only the seams and screws are mudded and sanded. The rest of the drywall is simply primed and painted, fast and easy.

When they talk about smooth coat in the U.S., I believe they are talking about coating the entire sheet of drywall and then trying to make it perfectly smooth through the application technique and lots (and lots) of sanding. It sounds like it is very labour intensive and expensive. As an alternative, they do orange peel and other textures which still coat the entire wall, but don’t have to be completely smooth in the end to save time and money (though it’s still more expensive than just the seams and screws).

K
5 years ago

I have plaster walls in my 1930’s twin home. I love them for their imperfections, and in a twin, they are great sound buffer.

Sometimes they are challenging hanging things but I do love the look.

Kelly
5 years ago

I love lime wash, but I think it looks better in old houses. My in laws have it all over in their 17th century French stone house, and it is so touchable in person. I love a white limewash because it’s more dimensional than paint, but doesn’t read too textural in photos. I dream of someday having plaster, but I’d feel silly sticking it in our 1960s apartment building. In your mountain house with stone, though? Go for it!

Admin
EHD
5 years ago
Reply to  Kelly

exactly SO touchable thats the perfect way to describe it. Your in-laws place sounds idyllic!

Summer Lynn McDowell
5 years ago

Lime wash for sure! I’ve been obsessing over lime wash because my husband and I recently moved to Burgundy France and our making the upstairs room into a master suite. Their house was probably built in the 1500’s. I could do plaster all day. Lol. Anyway we m, ok my husband, has been reduing the stone walls with none other than Lime (chaux) and sand. You mix the two and fill in around the stones then after it’s a bit dry scrap it and it’s insainly beautiful. Here’s the scoop the ceilings are slanted very high, dry walled, then taped and patched. I found a beautiful sage green paint I love in flat but I too know all the tape, problems are going to show and have been obsessed with the idea of a suede looking hypoallergenic, moisture and smell absorbing lime was paint. It’s not only cheaper but it’s so much better than paint. Plus we have the lime. Problems, color. How can I get it soft green which I so want in my bedroom AND the process getting it on with a brush just right on a latter. Hard! I even thought while doing this what color would… Read more »

Admin
EHD
5 years ago

that sounds absolutely beautiful I would love to see how it all turns out!

emma
5 years ago

When I bought my lime I saw there were sites that sold color add ins- maybe google it to look into it? It’s totally doable I think.

kelly
5 years ago

I can enjoy/appreciate these finishes when they are original to the house, but don’t like them much as a deliberately chosen technique. Some of the images above are lovely but I think i would tire of it in my own space.

jmk
5 years ago

Fun! How long does lime wash last? Must be more than standard paint. All for it since it is so beautiful.
I put myself through school painting walls, can now spot a bad paint job a mile away and am somewhat obsessed with paint. Skim coating was the worse and a good skim coater is worth their weight in gold. When you say “orange peel”? Do you mean just using standard eggshell paint? Certainly more durable than matte. Love the matte look but maintenance is the worse. Also, people do not realize that expensive paint can be cost saving, aside from looking so much better and lasting longer. I found that a gallon of Farrow and Ball, particularly with non-F&B primer tinted to near the color of the overcoat to give it even more depth, would cover so much more than a cheaper paint and that clay based color is beyond compare. Do you ever use full on gloss for trim? I really dislike that. Semigloss looks so much better.

Anne Marie
5 years ago

What about using limepaint instead of plaster? Kalklitir.com has some beautiful color options. That way you can have the appearance of the textured plaster, while still having smooth walls in case you want to change it in the future (without having to skim coat the plaster back to a smooth finish)?

Admin
EHD
5 years ago
Reply to  Anne Marie

the crew is actually in the process of doing the ‘slight hand’ plaster texture on the house right now and what we are debating is the limewash paint in just the bedrooms or throughout the whole house so their will be a slight slight texture to the walls everywhere

Jessvii
5 years ago

Am leaning towards subtle, and nothing that looks too Parisian.

Am totally fine with cutting costs on paint finishes. Am still sad the built-in bunks got shelved for later. But for most things, the difference that can be appreciated from afar (online) usually doesn’t justify the larger cost.

Christina
5 years ago

” We want subtle, calm and simple texture.”

I love the plaster/ limewash as long as it isn’t too loud/obvious. The Venetian look is what makes it dated. I would be very careful and aim for the Belgian to keep it fresh and modern but have that depth you desire. Should you do it…I love spending other people’s money so, Heck YES! 🙂 But maybe to save money, can you keep it to just the guest room? I think you can if it is isolated enough in terms of halls and lighting. I love me some smooth walls, but it sure is pricey!

Barb
5 years ago

check out https://www.pure-original.com/marrakech-walls It has the look of Moroccan plaster walls.
they also have lime paint

Karyn
5 years ago

I dunno on this one. I love, love, love the look when done in the right house with the right “old-world” context. But in a Scandi-rustic-modern house? I worry that too many different looks might be happening here.

Elizabeth
5 years ago
Reply to  Karyn

Agree! I think limestone wash is beautiful, but I don’t think it’s something you decide on after having designed the rest of the house without it in mind. And I reeeeeallly don’t think it works with wood ceilings. I’m also afraid there are way too many things going on in the mountain house (and that very few of those things are “mountain-y”

Judy
5 years ago
Reply to  Elizabeth

I agree with Elizabeth. What I have seen of the mountain house is very beautiful, although I would describe it as modern rather than rustic or scandanavian. This is good to my taste but the limestone wash or other texture does not sound appealing next to all that beautiful wood.

Keara
5 years ago

I’m not familiar with the limestone wash in person but if you are leaning towards texture my advice would be ANYTHING BUT ORANGE PEEL. I live in a home with 100% orange peel and it feels so dated, even with moody paint and select bead board installed. Yes it does a fabulous job hiding inconsistencies and I’ve been able to patch my own drywall with some spray texture (in select, back of house spaces), but go for something more sexy if you have the option! My two cents 😀

Admin
EHD
5 years ago
Reply to  Keara

Agree 100% with you on the orange peel, when we bought the house it had all orange peel walls and rounded edges which dated the house but now both of those are being fixed as I type this which is so wonderful.

Erin
5 years ago

I vote no texture… it would be one of those things that would be so hard to fix if you changed your mind later on. When we moved into our house our kitchen was full of it, I sanded the walls to remove most of it but that was so labor intensive… I don’t wish that on anyone!

Mandy
5 years ago
Reply to  Erin

Agreed! It must be regional as someone else pointed out – textured walls on the east coast are always considered dated (and an extra cost to apply – and to remove!). I would just do the slight texture for cost reasons – as close to smooth as you can get! Then its much easier to clean as well.

Paige Cassandra Flamm
5 years ago

I do not love textured walls, but realized that likely puts me in the minority here. We have textured walls in our current home, and I would totally make them smooth again if I knew it wouldn’t be a complete waste of money to do so!

Paige
http://thehappyflammily.com

Brooke
5 years ago

I still find it bizarre that a smooth finish isn’t standard in a lot of the USA like it is in most of Canada. That being said if you can’t do smooth (I also wouldn’t want to pay triple) I think this subtly textured finish is beautiful and I think as long as it doesn’t go overly textured or overly mottled it will add a really nice depth to all the rooms in the cabin. I say go for it!

Gigi
5 years ago

I am a huge fan of Jersey Ice Cream Co’s work so before even reading the full post I was yelling yes! Do it! based on my knowledge of their work alone. It is so good. C’mon Em, you can pull this off. You’re talented.

Karen T.
5 years ago

Generally I’d say no but given that you’re a designer, have access to help, a plethora of cool ideas/resources and aren’t afraid of making changes if there’s a mistake made (hello, wallpapered guest bedroom!) I’d say go for it. It has the potential to be AMAZING.

Kristin
5 years ago

I’m so confused as to why your sheetrock would be more expensive to be smooth as opposed to textured? I didn’t even realize the orange peel finish was an option anymore. We just put up an addition and I worked with the drywaller extensively and we never talked about a difference in finish. All of our walls are smooth. Can you explain in more detail why it would cost 3 times as much in your area? I have a number of friends with new houses and no one has textured walls, and these are average, middle class people who would not have chosen a more expensive finish. We are in the Midwest so maybe that has something to do with it? I am really missing something here–very confused.

Emily Johnson
5 years ago
Reply to  Kristin

I’m confused too – I read on another blog about perfectly smooth walls costing a ton, and I was a little confused there as well. Thanks!

Jody
5 years ago
Reply to  Emily Johnson

I think she’s talking about the finish for plaster walls. Not drywall or Sheetrock. I was mystified too.

Lydia
5 years ago
Reply to  Jody

Recent shots of the mountain house are all drywall so I’m very curious! I wonder what product they use to cover the whole wall instead of regular taping mud for the seams.

Lane
5 years ago
Reply to  Kristin

Maybe because they don’t have drywall, instead they might have plastered walls (as in gypsum over a wire mesh and/or wood planks). So they have to put gypsum all over the wall to fix the existing flaws. I have a home from 1950s in the midwest with smooth plaster. In fact most if not all homes from that time in the midwest would be smooth plaster. If people improve homes they might tear it out and install drywall. I’m not familiar with doing all. It’s not hard to patch, and sand. Painting with flat paint helps reflect away from any imperfections in the wall. I’m often shocked at how much Emily pays for some things. But I’m sure she gets the best contractors to do work

Heidi
5 years ago
Reply to  Kristin

From what I know, perfectly smooth drywall would cost more because they have to skim coat the ENTIRE wall with mud, not just seem and screw holes. They also have to take more care taping seems, etc. to reduce imperfections, because EVERY imperfection is seen on smooth walls. Those things mean more materials and labor cost (although I didn’t realize it would be triple).

Jasmine
5 years ago
Reply to  Kristin

I’m not sure why there is this regional difference, but it seems like orange peel is pretty standard throughout the western part of the country. I do know that smooth drywall is much more labor intensive. I have friends rebuilding homes right now (due to wildfire) and I’ve been shocked that their entire homes are being drywalled in about the same amount of time it took for smooth drywall in our kitchen/mud room remodel. I can see why Emily is saying it’s triple the cost.

Emily
5 years ago
Reply to  Jasmine

I think Emily is referring to drywall (right?). But why do you have to skim coat the entire wall and not just tape and mud the seams as the other commenter mentioned? (And which I assume you need to do in all cases anyway?) Is it to avoid even the tiniest imperfection? We just had our kitchen dry walled and you can’t tell where the seams are – at least I sure can’t. I’m still confused. 🙁

Cici Haus
5 years ago

I am OBSESSED with plaster walls. I plan to use them in my master and the kitchen of my 100-year-old, English Cottage-style Bungalow. LOVE LOVE LOVE the texture, movement, casual elegance they bring.

Joshua Rich
5 years ago

Go smooth and just paint. The textured walls can look neat and I’m sure if anyone can do them, that would be you, but they aren’t timeless. Smooth solid paint never goes out.

Naomi
5 years ago

As long as you aren’t doing orange peel, go for it. I had orange peel walls in a duplex once and they bummed me out so much. I feel like theyr the equivalent of a popcorn ceiling but on the wall.

Also curious if you’d be able to achieve the same effect with wallpaper? As a mere mortal with a zero budget the thought of adding a project like this would give me an anxiety attack. But it is gorgeous and moody!

Megan
5 years ago
Reply to  Naomi

“I feel like they’re [orange peel walls] the equivalent of popcorn celing but on the wall” – This is exactly how I feel. We have a couple walls in our house with some weird texture on them, and I hate it. I didn’t realize textured walls were a standard thing anymore. Who knew?!

Lauren
5 years ago

I’d generally vote no given the style and age of this house, but maybe you could make it work. Also, I live in New England and no one has textured walls so I find it interesting that’s it’s more expensive to have a smooth finish in CA. In new construction, I don’t think anyone ever gets textured walls here. The standard around Boston is to use blueboard and a plaster smooth coat finish. Maybe it’s more expensive than basic sheetrock, but it’s the standard and is a much nicer wall than plain drywall (in my opinion). And even when sheetrock is used it’s still smooth, so kind of confused on why smooth is triple the cost.

Courtney
5 years ago

I’n into it. The subtle versions. I think it will help the balance out the more modern elements with a rustic vibe.

Christa
5 years ago

YES!
this will look great and a perfect solution for what to do about orange peel texture. I used Portola Paints on my fireplace wall, which had an original exterior stucco finish — I guess they really wanted to sell that “indoor-outdoor” feeling but that was one original feature I was not willing to keep for the sake of character. Anyhow, it turned out great. Portola does lots of gorgeous tones including a very Emily deep blue. I say go for it!

Daiva
5 years ago

Have you looked at https://www.pure-original.com/lime-paint-fresco Their paint is amazing and gives your walls all different finishes. Mjolk in Canada has done their country home in several shades. Their store is also finished in the paints.

Daiva
5 years ago

Thankfully, Ontario Canada only has smooth drywall done in every home. No drywaller would be in business if they did an orange peel finish! Older homes were done in plaster, but it’s still always smooth looking.

Liz
5 years ago

YES YES!! I have been pinning all the limewash walls for a while but having a tricky time finding how to manage it in a newer home in the US. Something about ordering lime chalk from Europe is super intimidating and $$$. Looking forward to ALL the textured wall inspo. Thanks, Emily!

Lane
5 years ago

No! It works in a loft, but not in a home. In this case rustic = unrefined, unfinished farmhouse. Do accent wall in color paint or wallpaper instead.

Marina Kotovnikov
5 years ago

Skip smoothing the all the walls out (and save yourself the $$$) – plastered looks cool, with so much character and a European feel. Maybe you can do a mix of smooth and textured?

Beth
5 years ago

Does how much you love the look depend on the kind of color/technique combo? As an artist, maybe the truly super deep colors might look better on plaster than a lime based application. I don’/t know this for sure, but it is a gut feeling I have. Might be worth some investigating. : )

Em
5 years ago

I despise orange peel with the heat of a thousand suns. It is hideous. The walls get SO dirty with all that texture. We’re buying a house right now and my only condition is we have to skim coat the walls. Orange peel is tacky and cheap. It’s jusr bad. That said, i LOVE jerseyco. They’re really freaking good. However, it seems to work best in homes that are at least 100 years ago. 70s home? I don’t know. The only way it would work in your house is if it’s subtle, as you said, in only a room or two, and you must hire jerseyco to come do it. Ps. Why not drywall? That’s a much cheaper option then any kind of texture and then you could just paint. Why do you have to do texture? Pps anyone know what I can expect to pay to skimcoat a 3,300sq house?

Lane
5 years ago

I wonder how much it costs, and if it would be less to just put drywall over it. Or just patch up whatever you need and paint it over with a flat/matte paint. If textured wall is original to the home then leave as is. If flat finish is original then make it flat or do grass wallpaper

Julie
5 years ago

Slight texture if needed to save money. Anything else I(limewash, more texture whatever) feels like trying too hard in a house of this vintage and style.

Wendy
5 years ago

Did you say nine YEARS? Maybe it’s that nine months feels like years.

Em
5 years ago

Question:why did you go with plaster in Portland at all? Why not drywall? It would’ve been cheap AND smooth. I guess I’m just so confused why anyone would choose plaster orange peel over smooth drywall. I can’t wrap my head around it. Can someone explain this to me?

Admin
EHD
5 years ago
Reply to  Em

we did do a smooth coat finish drywall in Portland it just wasn’t as cost effective as it could’ve been given for an investment property as the other ways you can finish drywall. Hope that clarifies things!

Cass
5 years ago
Reply to  EHD

But we’re all confused why plaster over drywall at all? Everywhere else, like where I am, seems to plaster over the seams only. Then you prime and paint the drywall. Smooth AND cheap

Anon
5 years ago
Reply to  EHD

Is this because the existing walls were previously textured already? I can see that the removal of the texture would be expensive.

Lesley
5 years ago
Reply to  EHD

So you did level 6 drywall finish on the Portland house? And what level are you doing on the mountain house? Thanks for clarifying!

Molly
5 years ago
Reply to  Em

This isn’t the first time I’ve heard someone living out West think that there must be a level 5 finish (level 6 isn’t a thing, but level 5 is what Lesley is thinking of – a skim coat on top of the drywall). I’m thinking the contractors have pushed it so much as standard that homeowners think a simple level 4 isn’t an option. Level 5 just isn’t necessary unless you are doing a high gloss finish. Or unless you want the texture or unless, like me, you’re trying to match existing plaster walls.

Paula Carr
5 years ago

I like limewash…a LOT…but only in colors other than white. In white, it just looks dirty to me. Like the Belgian/ Alex Vandervoort interiors which also look dirty to me. Like dust bunny chic. 🙂

Roberta
5 years ago

Have you sold the Portland house yet and, if so did you make a profit? Bold question, I know, but I would love to do the same thing! Thanks!

EMILY HEDRICK
5 years ago

Not trendy!
Delicious and rich! A nod to ancient times. I adore it.

Lindsey
5 years ago

Here in the midwest, our walls are all smooth. The reason is because they only cover the seams and sand that down to smooth rather than cover all the walls. It’s a huge cost savings, and all that needs to be done to the drywall after that is prime it using drywall primer. This also makes it super easy to patch any holes because there isn’t a texture to try to match. If you want smooth walls, I wonder if this would be an option for you.

Heidi
5 years ago
Reply to  Lindsey

I’m also in the midwest (Kansas), and I rarely see perfectly smooth walls.. In my experience, they cost more because the entire wall is skim coated with mud (not just the seems) to reduce imperfections.

heaterwhoyt
5 years ago

Yes. Do this.

My current house has cement walls that are plastered on top with a LOT of texture. It’s not quite right in some spots, but I don’t really get the appeal of smooth walls. They are so difficult to do and maintain and then they are so boring. Go for something unique.

Also: I was another blog about the topic of smooth walls. In some areas, they simply DON’T texture the walls at all–you put join compound on the seams, smooth it out, and done. But you don’t really have smooth walls–you just have un-textured walls. Western U.S. usually ALWAYS textures, and to get perfectly smooth walls you have to skim coat the entire wall, which is expensive and time consuming. I think.

Julie S
5 years ago
Reply to  heaterwhoyt

Yes, sounds correct to me. I live in SoCal and my hubby was in construction years back – contractors here seem to prefer to do a fast sloppy job on the drywall seams and then spray cheap texture (your choice of fine or large orange peel particles lol) all over everything to cover up the imperfections. When as in the eastern US they do a nice job taping and mudding the seams, then prime and paint, you do still frequently have slight humps at each seam which can be seen with the wrong paint sheen or light angle. Here in California, the 3x expensive smooth walls involve covering every inch of wall with a thin layer of skim coat and then sanding it dead flat.. using bright lights to find low/high spots and trying to make it perfect. Very expensive.

Stacie Martin
5 years ago

I think, with all the textures (wood, stone, tile) that are going on in this project, perfectly smooth-coat walls would actually look odd! In fact, much of the story here, since you’re now combining a modern Scandi aesthetic with a more rustic one, is actually ABOUT the texture now. Texture creates warmth, tells a story, encourages relaxation. I say yes, yes, yes, go for it!

Angélica
5 years ago

I love this Organic Feel. Very Minimal, and Serene!

I am embracing this for my home!

Nl
5 years ago

Limewash: really hard to clean or repair. My favorite product is something called Lusterstone. Gives you a super subtle shimmer, and you can scrub it. Kick it, dent it, and a quick swipe of a trowel you are good again. It is expensive but beats everything else we tried and my hubby did it for a living. Whatever you pick from Portola, ask them about how easy it it is to repair or clean.

Cindy
5 years ago

As a new follower without the advantage of knowing your space intimately, I am weighing in on your question of wall treatment for your mountain home. You have some compelling thoughts which have opened my eyes to the beauty of limewash surfaces … in the right space. I personally would NOT do the limewash finish but if YOU love it, if you must do it, go subtle. My reason for this opinion is from personal experience and my desire for practicality. We purchased a timberframe home in Central Oregon two years ago which had heavily textured walls (think Italy!) in much of the house. Even with endless Central Oregon sunshine, huge windows, grand vaulted ceilings, and exposed timbers the textured walls were shadowy, a distraction, they dated and darkened the space. I wanted a cleaner look, more of a rustic modern mountain vibe with a nod toward Denmark, my husband’s roots. This past year we have been ridding the walls of this heavily textured look. We decided to do so not only for the fresher look but for reasons which may or may apply to your home. Our home wears a lot of hats and sees a lot of traffic.… Read more »

Sur
5 years ago

Is this an american thing? In Europe every house has smooth walls. Even the cheapest homes have smooth walls – it’s by far the cheapest option here. Strange it would cost more somewhere else.

Also have you looked at “pure original” brand paint? It might work for what you need.

Ellen H
5 years ago

We have extremely rough plaster in a 1930s Dutch Colonial in Connecticut and it’s lovely; not for everybody maybe but I think it’s fantastic and gives the house amazing character and texture. It’s tough to paint in that it uses a lot of paint but on the other hand, precision is not required! Lots to love about plaster.
I’m not a huge fan of the limewash but haven’t ever seen it in actuality so can’t comment on that.
Good luck! And embrace the plaster experience . . .