How do professional wallpaper installers deal with corners?
each wall section will be its own panel -- butt seam should be fine then? (MPI2611)
It depends on the pattern, kind of paper/vinyl [pre-glued or not] if you know how to book properly and if the walls are perfectly plumb. Each corner inside or out will determine how the next strip will go down. Remember, they are generally 28" wide and you make the piece 4" or so bigger top and bottom to make sure you have even tops and bottoms. You butt, so if yur pattern allows, you won't see a 1% or 2% tilt, like you would with graphics. I've wallpapered my share of rooms in my time from bathrooms to kitchens to full blown family rooms. I've papered ceilings, too. Wall paper/vinyl, never.... and I mean never.... bubbles or tents at all. It goes down 100% flat each and every time. You can not mess up wall papering, unless you're a real idiot. So, in my opinion, there's no comparison.
I was referring to how do profession wallpaper installers deal with corners.
How do professional wallpaper installers deal with corners?
Going into an inside corner, your piece should wrap around the corner 1/8th to 1/4 inch on to the adjacent wall.
The next piece overlaps the previous pieces' edge.
Around the outside corners, you'd be better off if you dont have to cut & overlap, preferring to wrap the
product right around, if the corner is pretty plumb
Wallpaper can indeed 'tent' on the inside corners, especially if it is stretched going into that corner.
\And Yes, it's easy for an amatuer to screw up in this area with wallpaper.
(I have over 27 years stripping & hanging wallpaper with over 100,000 rolls stripped/hung.)
"Any idiot can do it (sic)" ... Yeah, I've seen their work!
1/2" overlaps at the corners worked quite well...I think I overthought this one...
now I know!