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Interiors & Decorating

Inspiration and advice on interior design, decorating styles, colour schemes and home aesthetics.

Interiors & Decorating

How To Paint a Ceiling

Painting a ceiling is fairly simple, if you have a head for heights! If you are prepared beforehand, you can paint an average-sized ceiling in just a couple of hours. It takes just three steps to paint a ceiling:

Painting a ceiling is fairly simple, if you have a head for heights! If you are prepared beforehand, you can paint an average-sized ceiling in just a couple of hours. It takes just three steps to paint a ceiling:

  1. Get your equipment together.
  2. Prepare your ceiling.
  3. Get painting!

How to paint a ceiling: what you need

If you are doing a simple ceiling painting job, you won’t need much equipment. If you are painting walls and ceiling, always start with the ceiling first (the general rule is to work from top to bottom). To paint your ceiling, you will need: roller and roller tray, paint, filler, filling knife, sandpaper, sash brush, step ladder or extension handle.

How to paint a ceiling: prepare the surfaces

Clean, smooth surfaces are crucial when it comes to painting a ceiling. Cover your floor and any large furniture with dust sheets to protect them from rogue paint splatters, dust and filler. Make sure your ladder is set up safely and securely. First, fill in any holes or cracks. Once the filler has dried, sand until the surface is completely smooth. Use the sandpaper to sand any cracked or flacking bits of paint, too. When the surface has been sanded and smoothed, give it a dust down and run over it with a soft cloth soaked in water or sugar soap. This will prevent dust, hair or cobwebs being permanently painted into your ceiling! There is no need to use masking tape if you are doing your ceiling before your walls, unless you are using a bold colour on your ceiling and a lighter colour on the walls.

How to paint a ceiling: get painting!

Like many jobs, painting a ceiling is easier if there are two of you. If there are two (or more) you will need one set of ladders and one paint pot each. One person can go around the outside of the room, cutting in, while the other person can attack the main ceiling area with a roller. Be careful not to overload your roller; far from saving time, it will give you an uneven finish and a speckled face!

While the cutting in is still wet, take the roller and roll a strip of paint around the edge of the ceiling. This will help you to reduce splatter the walls. Next, work in strips from the narrowest point of the ceiling. This will help you to overlap on still-wet paint, and help to avoid join marks where dry paint has been painted over. Regardless of whether or not you know how to paint a ceiling, by following these simple steps and remembering to avoid overlapping dry paint with wet, you will get a smooth, professional finish.

Don’t forget to clean your equipment thoroughly! However, if you don’t finish your painting in one day, you can wrap it tightly in cling film to prevent the paint from drying out.

Looking for more interiors & decorating advice?

Find clear, practical answers to common interiors & decorating questions, helping homeowners understand everyday issues, know what checks they can carry out safely, and when it is best to contact a qualified professional.

  • What is the difference between a painter and a decorator?

    A painter focuses on applying paint - walls, ceilings, woodwork. A decorator does all of that but also handles wallpaper, specialist finishes, surface prep, and can advise on colours and materials. Many professionals do both and call themselves painters and decorators. For a straightforward repaint, a painter is fine. If you want wallpaper, something specialist, or someone to help you make decisions about the finish, go with a decorator.

  • How many coats of paint does a professional decorator apply?

    For most walls, it's a primer or mist coat, then two topcoats. New plaster, bare surfaces, or a big colour change might need more preparation or extra coats. Cutting corners on coats or using cheap paint are the most common ways to get a finish that looks fine at first and starts showing its age within a year. A trusted decorator always prepares the surface properly and won't rush between coats.

  • How do I prepare my home before a decorator arrives?

    Move furniture away from the walls and take down pictures, mirrors, and anything fixed to the walls. If you can strip old wallpaper yourself beforehand, it'll save time on site. Make sure every part of the room is accessible and well-lit. Talk through surface prep with the decorator in advance - a good one will tell you exactly what they need before they can start.

  • How do I know if my walls need replastering before decorating?

    If there are significant cracks, areas that sound hollow when you tap them, persistent damp, or large patches that are flaking or badly uneven - replastering first will give a much better result. Decorating over problem plaster looks fine initially but every imperfection tends to show through, especially with modern matt paints. A decorator can assess whether full replastering or careful preparation and skim coating will get you where you want to be.

  • What are the most popular interior design styles right now?

    There's been a pretty clear shift away from the all-grey, everything-neutral look of the 2010s. Warmer tones are dominating - clay, terracotta, stone, off-white - with natural materials like linen, rattan, and solid timber replacing high-gloss finishes. Biophilic design (plants, natural light, organic shapes) has gone from trend to standard practice. There's also a real appetite for spaces that feel personal and collected rather than showroom-ready - bold wallpaper, layered textiles, and period features being celebrated rather than painted over.

  • How long does a full home decorating project typically take?

    A single room in good condition typically takes a professional two to three days. A full house - particularly an older property that needs a little more care beforehand - can take several weeks. The part that often catches people off guard is the preparation: stripping wallpaper, filling, sanding, and priming all take a good amount of time, and doing them properly really does make all the difference to the finished result.

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