
He did a good enough job of skim-floating and sanding the walls smooth.
Unfortunately, he neglected to wipe residual dust off the walls.
The problem is that nothing sticks to dust. Not paint, not primer, and not wallpaper. Over time, stress, humidity, and other factors can cause the wallpaper to expand and contract, which puts tension on the seams. This tension tugs at the seams , and if the wall surface underneath is unstable ( dusty ), the layers can pull apart ( delaminate ), and you end up with failing seams.



But, as mentioned above, putting wallpaper over this can open a can of worms.
Even with a good wallpaper primer underneath, the drying / shrinking wallpaper can put stress on the seams. If the wall underneath is dusty, the layers may let loose of one another and result in a popped seam .
Tags: bucket of water, damp sponge, delaminate, drying, drywall, dust, dusty, heat gun, humidity, overspray, painted, popped seam, primer, pull apart, sanding, seams, shrinking, skim-floating, smooth, smooth the walls, stress, strip the old wallpaper, tension, wallpaper, wipe residual dust off the walls, woodwork
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