Customer Reviews
Customer Reviews - Gray and Grungy Brick Wall with Dripping White...
34 Reviews
5 out of 5 stars
Gray and Grungy Brick Wall with Dripping White Paint Wall Mural Removable Wallpaper
$61.99
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First, make sure you start IN THE CORRECT ORDER ON THE CORRECT SIDE. Even though the panels are numbered (e.g. 1 of 6, 2 of 6, etc.), they do NOT tell you in which direction the panels match (i.e. should 2 of 6 meet 1 of 6 on the left side or the right side?). Double check this before you start so you don’t put a panel that should be all the way on the left all the way on the right instead, like I did.
Second, yes these panels overlap, but that’s a good thing - it gives you some margin for error. The trick is lining them up such that they apply smoothly and seamlessly. DO NOT TRY THIS ALONE OR IT WILL BE VERY DIFFICULT. The technique I used: once you have the first panel applied, as described in steps 4 and 5 below (I tried to line the first panel up with the ceiling so that it was level), the best way to apply the subsequent panels is:
1. Have one person hold the panel up and align the top half with the adjacent panel such that the patterns match.
2. Have a second person simultaneously lining up the bottom half, instructing directions to the person holding the top, like “a little lower and to the right”. The person on top makes the adjustment, while also making sure the top pieces still align.
3. Once the panel is lined up, hold it in place firmly while the person on top peels off around 3-4 inches of the backing paper from the very top, all the way across.
4. Starting with the top corner closest to the adjacent panel, gently stick it on and work your hand smoothly across the top to affix the top strip of the panel (it should be fairly lined up with the ceiling).
5. The panel now should be free hanging from the top, and the partner lining up the panel on the bottom can relax, since the panel should be in place almost perfectly at this point. All that’s left is to pull the backing paper down and away slowly, 5-6 inches at a time, and smoothly work your hands out from the middle to the edges. In theory the panel should line up almost perfectly so all you need to worry about is making sure the backing paper doesn’t rip (it’s pain to peel off the back once ripped).
Attached is a pic of my finished product. Overall is looks great and has completely changed the makeup of the room. This is actually a pretty simple and inexpensive solution to brighten up a space; only reason I knocked a star off is for lack of any kind of instructions, even on the website. A simple guide like the one above would go a long way.
First, I have been an astrophysicist and photographer, and chose this this these for a museum I co-own.
One - it's very difficult to capture a starry scene like this with and expand it to this size without some distortion. It's tough to get such fine resolution at this scale WHEN LOOKING at a close distance. This scene looks great when you step back, as it is meant to be seen. There is a little movement due to rotation during being photographed, but you don't normally see this in smaller scale, only at a scale like this. When you step back, it's still pretty cool.
Two - the price is great.
Three - as with any wallpaper project, you have to know what your medium is and how to apply. The peel and stick backing on this wallpaper did nto hurt my wall at all, there mush have been a cheap paint on the walls of the person who gave the bad review. Also, when using this wallpaper, don't be afraid to overlap by an inch or so... there is some repeat on each piece that allows for this, and it eliminated the seem that will be there otherwise, and it's hard to make any seem on dark wallpaper not show. I overlapped and the seems faded away and things lined up great.
I'm using this paper as the backdrop for an astronomy and atmospheric room I'm creating for my museum and education centers expandingminds.com. I am employed some black light which makes the colors pop, and when set against the other projects in the room, it's going to look great.
Daniel