
Has anyone put up wallpaper on the inside walls of a camper? If so, has anyone had problems with it staying up? I was wondering if the temperature fluxuations throughout the year would cause problems with it sticking or staying in place?
planovet wrote:starleen2 (the Stewart family) used wallpaper in their Weekender. It's on the walls and ceiling.
LINK
hunter535 wrote::hammer:
I am currently installing Luan on the walls and ceiling. My wife and I picked through the stuff at Lowes to find the cleanest and nicest grain we could find. Not quite sure what we are going to use on the walls. One thing that I was thinking was to either stain the luan and urethane it or just urethane it. Unfortunately you still see the screws although they do grow on you. That is why I asked about wallpaper. It does hide a multitude of sin! The ceiling we are thinking of painting white just for the added lightness in the camper. Any other ideas for the walls?
hunter535 wrote:Unfortunately you still see the screws although they do grow on you. That is why I asked about wallpaper. It does hide a multitude of sin! The ceiling we are thinking of painting white just for the added lightness in the camper. Any other ideas for the walls?
35thAV wrote:hunter535 wrote:Unfortunately you still see the screws although they do grow on you. That is why I asked about wallpaper. It does hide a multitude of sin! The ceiling we are thinking of painting white just for the added lightness in the camper. Any other ideas for the walls?
I covered the walls in ours using a light weight automotive carpet (sort of like "speaker box" carpet). I just glued it to the walls and it worked really well and held up wonderfully. It helped keep the trailer warm, cozy and quiet- esspecially when you brush up against the walls while your sleeping. It's also really easy to keep clean - if it does get dirty I just vacuume the walls!
Miriam C. wrote::thumbsup: They used to make wall paper for kitchens and bathrooms that resisted vapor........
About the allergies---confined spaces and fumes are horrible. I went back and covered my inside with shellac because it seals out wood and other odors. Seems I reacted to finishes too. Just enough to make it annoying.
You can get screw trim that make the screws more decorative and I would leave out glues as much as possible.
35thAV wrote:
Wow! That really limits the choices!
Hmmmm, I'll keep thinking about this one
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