Welcome to  wallliner.com, division of Cavalier Prints.

Cavalier Wall Liner  covers  problem walls and ceilings, paneling, 

plywood, cement blocks, drywall and any wall cracks.

BUY WALL LINER- WALLPAPER ON LINE

AT MORE THEN 40% DISCOUNT.

 

 

                             

 

 


 

Better Living Through Blankstock

 

  • From: Jim Parodi   Date: Wed, 24 Nov 1999 19:04:32

This is a very long post.  In fact, it's almost a book. I suggest
printing it before reading so your eyes don't go all googly.  I realize
that this subject was thoroughly covered last year, but there are
probably about 300 people here now who weren't here last  year:
	Have you ever looked up at the ceiling in a modern building with
exposed wooden beams?  Nowadays, more likely than not, you will see 1
foot wide beams which are actually made up of  1 or 2 inch wide wooden
planks with seams offset from each other and laminated together by
adhesive. Fat, laminated beams held together by glue are found in ski
lodges, restaurants and malls. They accept tons of roof weight and are
designed to handle the weight of additional tons of snow in northern
climates. 
Cheap modern construction you say?  Actually, these beams are more
trustworthy than the old "one piece" types which may have had hidden
stress lines within them. With the newer beams, every cubic inch can now
be examined before they are assembled.  Even pre-fab truss beams are now
made out of plywood-like material and these humble materials too,  take
on substantial weight and building stress.
Plywood itself is an amazing thing.  Thin sheets of weak wood are mated
together, with each successive sheet's grain direction counterpoised 90
degrees and adhered together so that this "weak" wood  is now able to
withstand heavy furniture as flooring material-even hurricane winds.
So what's this got to do with wallpapering?
Well, every time you use blankstock lining, in terms of strength, you
are taking advantage of this  "multiplier effect" by laminating two
sheets of wallcovering together with an adhesive.
If you hang a piece of blankstock vertically, since it is made of 
paper, it will be subject to the drying and shrinking forces that any
fiber product will be susceptible to-like cotton jeans after the first
washing (even in cold water).  By observation when seams pop,  it looks
like that the paper will try to shrink in from the seams towards the
center of the sheet.  This makes sense, when you take into account the
manufacturing process of the paper.  
For years, papermakers and paperhangers have noted that the paper has a
directional "grain" to it-just like wood.  And just like wood, shrinkage
occurs to a greater extent laterally across the grain rather than
lengthwise vertically.  But with both materials, it is understood that
shrinkage occurs everywhere to different degrees and for this reason the
observation that shrinkage starts at the seam and only travels in one
direction is flawed. 
	To illustrate (without an illustration), imagine that the entire sheet
of paper is a grid of 1" squares separated by a ½" space between them on
all sides.  Let's say that after drying,  each ½" space wants to be
1/64th of an inch narrower (of course, the 1" squares , since they are
made of  paper too, also want to be shorter and narrower, but for the
moment let's just say they remain a constant 1' square. Also for the
moment let's leave out the shrinkage from top to bottom).
	The vertical column of 1" squares  directly down the center of the
sheet wants the column to the left and right of it 1/64th of an inch
closer to it.  In fact, each vertical column of squares wants the
neighboring left and right vertical columns 1/64th of an inch closer to
it. No shrinkage movement can occur, however, due to the strength of the
wallpaper surrounding each square.
	But when we get to the vertical columns running down the left and right
seams there is an opportunity for weakness if the paint film there does
not have the adhesive strength to the drywall which can withstand this
force. If the paint lets go, the seam pops and travels toward the
center.
	However, if you took a blade and cut the same sheet of paper down the
middle from floor to ceiling, you could start the paper shrinking in the
other direction.  The new weak seam in the center would start to shrink
outward towards the left and right seam if the underlying paint let it
do so.
 	Even after it is dry, the paper still exerts a tension on the painted
surface (see APN archive-Dry Shrinkage Exists) and seems to maintain
this "pull" over time for the duration of the installation. In other
words, it seems that the paper never tires or becomes like a weak
spring. 
	But what happens when you apply another paper over the blankstock,
engineering the room so that the pattern seams fall in the middle of the
blankstock seams?  The pattern paper wants to shrink all over, too.  But
instead of finding a weak toehold at its seam, it finds an incredibly
strong substrate which cannot be laterally pulled apart.  Now you have
effectively achieved this "lamination effect" and have put the two
paper's shrinkage tendencies into a dynamic tension.
(If you have any doubt about the tremendous force required to laterally
tear paper, take a sheet of type writer paper where you pull on one end
and someone else pulls on the other tug of war style. If you put even
pressure at each end you will see how incredibly strong this ordinary
material can be.)
	What this also means is that if the blankstock paper wants to shrink,
it is effectively "nailed down" by the entire surface area of the
adhered paper on top of it.  It can't shrink at the seam or anywhere
else*  because the force required to pull apart the overlying paper
would be tremendous, too. The overlying pattern sheet is "all-over"
adhered and laminated to the blankstock so that the blankstock seaming
throughout the room  is now "capped" and immobile.  This real benefit is
that now there can be no more stress on the underlying paint or primer
film at the seams because there is now zero tension on that paint
film-the tension now being controlled by the overlying sheet.  If I
could put the previous sentence in bold Italics, I would, because this
is the key to understanding why someone would recommend  blankstock
where the painted surface is suspect.   
* The asterix above is for the areas of the room that are not in dynamic
tension.  By mating the blankstock and pattern paper in this way you
have actually manufactured a giant, seamless new piece of wallpaper. 
But this giant piece that covers the whole room  still remains a paper
product and still wants to shrink where there is no counter force to
stop it.  Like a regular piece of normal width wallpaper, it will find
weakness at its edges, so that the cuts in this giant wallpaper piece at
windows, doors, ceiling and baseboard are the places that could shrink
if given the chance.
	Since both overlying and underlying sheets have been lopped off in
exactly the same place in these areas, they can both pull in tandem and
shrink loose from the wall around these fixtures.  The same thing could
happen if, by bad room engineering, one of the overlying seams landed
smack on top of an underlying blankstock seam.
	Often paperhangers are taught to cut the blankstock a ¼ inch short of 
windows, doors, etc. and most times it is successful.  This can't be 
due to dynamic tension-since there isn't any at these points-rather, I
think it has more to do with the extra layers of better quality paint
found around these fixtures  where the painter went an inch or two onto
the wall with trim paint (instead of garbage flat).  Luck could have
something to do with it, too.  I don't know.  But, if you are in the
habit of painting the trim with this 1" or 2" wide band onto the wall
using a VOC alkyd and then papering without prep-coating that band of
paint, it may be time to re-think that knowing what forces are at work.
	So how can a blankstock installation fail?
	Gravity or adhesive failure.
	If for some reason the blankstock  was hung on chalky paint or powdery
joint compound or plaster  then the whole laminated mess can fall
DOWNWARD like a lead balloon due to the force of gravity and not lateral
stress. In this case everything would be brought down by it's own
weight. I have only heard of this happening twice in 23 years of
hanging-but there's always a next time.  An   X   test should be
performed before the liner goes up.  
	Besides gravity, failure could occur if the adhesive holding the liner
to the wall is weak or the surface wasn't properly prepped,  causing a
garden variety adhesion failure due to water leaks, high humidity, etc.
	And what about the recommendation to cross line, i.e. hanging
blankstock horizontally or what for years has been called "railroading"?
Do it if  it makes you feel better. But it seems there is a growing
segment of the paperhanging world that lines vertically with proper room
engineering. The whole appeal of cross lining is that you will never
make the boo-boo of having a seam fall on top of another.  
	As far as per/square/inch tension is concerned, it doesn't really make
a difference. However, getting back to the grain direction of paper, it
would appear that railroading the underlying paper would turn the
greatest amount of potential lateral shrinkage 90 degrees on it's side
making the paper pull hardest downward towards the floor at the ceiling,
and upwards towards the ceiling at the baseboard.
	Also, be aware that with railroading, unless your underlying blankstock
seams are excellent, there is a chance of seeing long horizontal lines
in the wrong lighting.  It's true  that if you have a less than perfect
vertical seam that that may show too, but my very subjective opinion is
that a vertical underlying line isn't as bad, because it echoes the
vertical lines of the pattern paper.   Whatever your opinion, the trick
is to get  good  invisible blankstock seams.
 	I switched over to vertical lining about 8 years ago, have never had
the teensiest problem,  and I will never go back to cross lining. 
	On a final note, this should go without saying, but let me say it again
anyway---blankstock is blank paper and not the synthetic white spun poly
used for bridging purposes.

 

 

Send mail to gothampr@earthlink.net with questions or comments about this web site.
Copyright © 2001 CAVALIER PRINTS
Last modified: August 11, 2025