Quick and Easy Way to Paint Beadboard
It can be a real paint to Paint Beadboard because of all the nooks and crannies. I used to start out by painting the grooves with a brush and then using a roller to get the rest of the panel. But it takes a long time to brush EVERY SINGLE groove on a 4×8 Beadboard Panel so I took out a step.
How to paint beadboard
First, I almost always paint beadboard paneling before I cut it to size and install it. I find it’s much easier to get paint into the grooves while it’s laying flat on a work surface than after it’s installed and you have to “jab” the paint into the grooves at the bottom where it meets the baseboard or whatever it’s sitting on.
Before I start paint beadboard, I prep the panel by brushing all the dust out of all the grooves. I bought this soft bristle brush specifically for this purpose but a large dry paint brush works great too.
*I do not use an air compressor to blow the dust off. It would just settle back down on my wet paint after creating a whole room full of dusty air.
Next I Prep my roller so I don’t leave any fuzz in my paint.
Then I soak my roller to get as much paint as possible onto the beadboard panel. I push hard enough that the roller doesn’t “roll”, it slides, pushing paint along inside the groove.
Then I roll back over that area to smooth out the finish and make sure everything is covered. It might feel odd and like you’re doing it all wrong…but it’s pretty effective and fast. I don’t worry about the lines created on the roller by pushing hard, they disappear after rolling back and forth a couple times when it comes time to actually roll.
*It’s important to work in sections for this part to keep a wet edge! Smoosh some paint into the grooves in a small section and then roll it out…and then move onto the next area. Otherwise, you may end up with ridges and excess paint in some areas because you were concentrating on the paint in the grooves and not focused on where else the paint ended up.
Then I can cut and install. If applying beadboard to cabinets, I generally glue it on instead of nailing it so I don’t have any chips or nail holes to fill and touch up!
Did you find this tip helpful? You might also like these other Painting Tips!
Hi Heidi! If the paint is chipping and pealing, it’s because that paint is not adhered to the beadboard. I would scrape it and then sand it. That should get off everything that’s going to come off. Then prime over the whole panel. Then re-paint.
Not sure if I will get a reply due to the age of this article but, our bathroom has the original paint from the Beaded White Hardboard Wall Panels chipping and peeling off. Is there a way to paint over that and seal it and have it look good without having to pull the whole panel down and replace?
Are the ones you get (shown in pic) the ” standard length rollers or are they about 3-4″ long? I am looking for the standard length ones (soooo much lighter to paint entire rooms)…but my local SW doesn’t care them. If yours are the long length than I can try to make them pursue it further for me. Thanks a ton for your feedback!
I usually get them at the Sherwin Williams store.
Strange question….I see you are using my absolute favorite kind of paint roller….standard length but small diameter. I CANNOT find these anywhere anymore….where do you get yours? I’m desperate and when I ask around about finding them people look at me crossed eyed – like they think I’ve made it up. Ugh. Please help a gal out. Haha