Those pesky radiators really make it hard to do a thorough paint job.
At least, that’s what I convinced myself when I moved into my house and painted every room floor to ceiling, except for those irritating tight spots behind the radiators. You know which ones I’m talkin’ about.
The ones no standard paint roller or brush will wedge into, without being totally obvious that you forced a large, drippy, paint-covered object in there.
Installed extremely close to the wall, cast iron radiators take quite a bit of time to drain and remove for the convenience of painting without obstacles. And if you’ve ever been patient enough to drain one, you probably already know that you need to hire a small army to help you move it. And then you and the army bond over the next two days laying on the couch watching DIY Network because you all threw your backs out or dropped it on your foot.
My experience, at least.
So, I was furiously determined to come up with an easier way to paint behind the radiators.
My inspiration came to me when I was painting the entryway radiator. Actually, what happened is that a piece of plastic wrap got stuck to the paint (dried paint, thankfully). It occurred to me that if I wrapped the whole backside of the radiator with the same plastic wrap, it would probably stick well enough to serve as a handy paint barrier.
And it worked!
The Easy Way to Paint Behind a Radiator
- Slide a horizontal piece of plastic wrap behind the radiator to cover the lowest area. The cellophane may stick to your paint surface, and it may need to be taped to adhere well.
- Add more pieces of plastic wrap, layering and stacking until the entire radiator backside is covered
- Apply paint to the wall using a small 6.5″ paint roller that can reach through narrow spaces
- Add an extension to your paint roller handle, if necessary
- Allow the wall to dry before you remove the plastic wrap
Steps 1-2
I started from the bottom, coating the back of the radiator horizontally with long pieces of the wrap until the whole possibly-effected area was covered adequately, like hot dog rolls at the beach. And a messy paint job is just about as devastating as sandy rolls, so don’t act like I’m overthinking this.
Steps 3-4
Because I’m in the process of patching the stairwell from having removed the colorful gallery, I had gone and bought a new gallon of Burnished Bronze by Behr and was raring to crack it open. I used one of the smaller 6.5″ paint rollers that’s better for fitting in small spaces (as well as usually getting a finer paint finish), and went to town.
The application process went really well. And moreover, it wasn’t messy. The roller was a perfect fit into the narrow space, and while the plastic wrap got some paint on it, the radiator itself was totally guarded. The most nerve-wracking part of the whole job was whether or not the mixologist at Home Depot could match my previous can of Burnished Bronze exactly.
In this and the previous photo, the wall is still a little sticky, so you can see the variance in the wet paint spots versus the dry. The dog did not seem as unnerved. He was patiently waiting a birthday beach walk (he turned the big 0-3).
Step 5
Once the wall is dry, you can safely remove the plastic wrap from the radiator. Happily, the color match dried perfectly, which based on everything my Mom has told me, never happens.
And I’m finally through with staring at that white paint that had been peeking out at me.
I didn’t actually Google to find this idea, just tried it out for myself. Without bothering to look now, after the fact, does anyone else have any good tips before I paint the next 3 radiators in the house?
10 Comments
I usually use one of these bad boys ( http://bit.ly/qK5Iyd ) for the radiator and for the wall and trim behind. They also have longer handle options. I roll on a bunch of paint, but not so much that it’s dripping everywhere and then i brush it in. Then I roll behind the radiator. These zip rollers are great for larger odd surface areas like deck railings, furniture, doors, etc. They get the paint on fast with a good coat and then you just neaten everything up with a brush. It saves time from working paint in with a brush. Not sure if neaten is a word but it is for this comment.
Like it! A little bit smaller than the one I used, and it probably would have caused less of a mess on the back of the plastic. Good tip. A longer handle would have been more convenient, for sure.
Like! Looks good.
Thanks :)
Wow! It looks great! Hopefully we won’t fall in love with a house with a radiator…something about being little and it “working” that has forever scared me!
Funny – I feel the same skepticism about the more modern floor heaters. I’ve only ever lived in homes with radiators (even each of my apartments… maybe it’s a NY thing) and loved that I could rely on them always to be hot hot hot if my hands were cold from playing in the snow or my shoes were cold, or for when I just needed a good place to sit. Always resonated better with me than relying on hot air.
Radiant heat is actually better for your respiratory system than forced hot air. Forced hot air is dry and blows dust around.
Instead of plastic wrap, why not use a sheet of posterboard (they sell large sheets at craft stores) between the radiator and the wall to protect the radiator? I did it and it worked great.
Seems simpler to me –
This sounds great. One question how did you protect the baseboard the radiator. Did you cut in the paint with a brush or did you just use the roller?
Good question. I think that I got as close as I could with the roller, and then did touchups as I could with an extendable paint brush (like a small foam brush taped to a chopstick).