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Thread: Can I paint one wall?
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11-08-2011, 08:04 AM #1Registered User Promoted
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Can I paint one wall?
Am I able to paint just one wall in a room?
Thanks!
Vanessa
x3
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11-08-2011, 08:12 AM #2Registered User Promoted
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Yes. Have you tried?
Len Dalton
v X4
CA Certified Professional
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11-08-2011, 08:20 AM #3
Yes. If you try to use the material painter tool, it will paint the whole room by default. Instead, you need to open the Wall Specification dialog, go to the Material panel, and change the interior surface material manually. If you already painted the entire room, you may need to open up the Room Specification dialog and set the wall material back to "use default". You may also need to add wall breaks if your wall spans multiple rooms.
Dermot Dempsey
Principal Software Engineer
Chief Architect, Inc.
http://www.ChiefArchitect.com
http://www.HomeDesignerSoftware.com
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11-08-2011, 08:20 AM #4Registered User Promoted
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Yes I have tried! When I paint one interior wall all of the other walls change too.
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11-08-2011, 08:21 AM #5D. Scott Hall (The Bridge Troll)
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11-08-2011, 08:27 AM #6
I generally do not use the Paint Tool on Walls because it does the Room, not individual Walls. If I don't mind one color for all walls of the room then I may use the paint tool. You can always go back to the Room dbx and set the finish to "default" if necessary.
One way to handle this is with the "Wall Covering" tab in the Wall dbx - which does the face opposite the main layer (interior face). This tab allows more than one color or material to be used on a wall (horizontal stripes that you can control - set the heights as needed).
If you need to control the colors on each side of an individual wall then the only way is to copy the wall type - creating a new one with the specific colors as finish layers. That's the most comprehensive for interior walls of adjoining rooms which need different colors.
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11-08-2011, 09:01 AM #7Registered User Promoted
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Thank you! I was finally able to do it by making a copy of the wall and adding a wallcovering.
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11-08-2011, 09:15 AM #8
I think you are doing it the hard way. The wall covering is a good tool to use when you don't want to paint the whole wall from top to bottom. Please go back and read my previous post.
Dermot Dempsey
Principal Software Engineer
Chief Architect, Inc.
http://www.ChiefArchitect.com
http://www.HomeDesignerSoftware.com
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11-08-2011, 09:31 AM #9
Dermot,
This isn't quite right.
If the wall material is Drywall and you simply change it to "Color Red" then you lose the "Drywall" definition and the "Materials List" will be incorrect. For everything to be right in this case you actually need another layer in the wall definition - ie: "Paint" - or "WallPaper" or .....
IAE, you need to keep the Drywall.
As far as the Wall Covering Tab is concerned - it only does the surface opposite the main layer - which is OK for Exterior Walls but is inadequate for interior walls.
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11-08-2011, 09:39 AM #10
BTW, this is a good reason to consider a "Wall" paint mode. Just allow the Paint Tool to work on a Wall instead of on the Room. It should be an option.
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11-08-2011, 10:01 AM #11
Changing the interior or exterior surface material on a per wall basis works best when you are only concerned with cosmetic appearances. If you need to have all of the materials you are using show up in the materials list, then you should create a new wall type or use the wall covering tool.
The wall covering tool should work fine for either interior or exterior walls. Just be sure to check the appropriate Interior and/or Exterior checkbox for where you want the covering to go.Dermot Dempsey
Principal Software Engineer
Chief Architect, Inc.
http://www.ChiefArchitect.com
http://www.HomeDesignerSoftware.com
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11-08-2011, 10:14 AM #12
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11-08-2011, 10:29 AM #13Registered User Promoted
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One more question - The wall that I was trying to paint goes up into a stairwell. Between the upstairs wall and the downstairs wall there is a white line. I guess this line is part of the ceiling but I would like to get rid of it. Any ideas here?
Thanks!
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11-08-2011, 11:37 AM #14
It's difficult to know exactly. It could be a ceiling plane or it might be a room molding. Maybe extending the Wall Covering 1" higher might solve it.
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11-08-2011, 02:13 PM #15
I hear what everyone is saying about the Material Painter and the appropriate warnings as to it's use.
BUT...there is a way to use the Material Painter and paint only 1 wall in a room.
The trick is to temporarily name the room as an external room type (porch, etc), use the Material Painter to paint 1 wall and then rename the room to back to what you want.Glenn
Chief X5
www.glennwoodward.com.au
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