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I lined my shed walls with structafloor and painted with an off white which gives excellent brightness.
The ceiling is lined with a silver foil insulation material.
The floor is painted in a soft grey colour.
The wall lining also has insulation batts behind.
Structafloor was cost effective and is great for hanging and fitting things.
Regards
Keith
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I lined my workshop with plywood also. If you have a search from a few years ago you can see the thread where some mates came around and did an almighty job helping me. I got hardwood veneered ply (some of it was even figured) for $25 a sheet. I’ve tried searching for it since but can’t find it. It was ridiculously well priced. Cheaper than MDF.
I never painted it, but as Shane said it will be covered in cabinets, timber racks etc. I do see the benefit of a white wall, but in my case the walls in my shop have lots of cabinets and other storage so not sure how much benefit I’d personally get from it. I had a sparky install some LED lighting a while back and it’s excellent.
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Agree that ceiling white is not suitable for anything other than ceilings that presumably won't be danced upon. I forget what exactly is missing but it's the component that gives wall paint its bullet-proofiness and stickabilty qualities.(Those are professional painting terms, by the way.)
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Just thinking outside the box. Obviously you want to use your left over ceiling paint. I wonder if you could use that as a first coat and then put some semigloss over it.
To be honest you don't even need it to be a solid colour. It is just to lighten things up more than wood gain everywhere. You might even be able to use the ceiling paint thinned as a wash and get a nice weathered cabin effect. Could be even better than painting it.
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Ceiling paint is fairly fragile so it's likely that the more robust top coat will pull it off as it is applied.
The paint we thinned for the floor was a high quality paint to begin. That's why I didn't suggest using the ceiling paint as the first coat. A small sample would be a good idea if that route is considered.
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Ceiling paint is fairly fragile so it's likely that the more robust top coat will pull it off as it is applied.
The paint we thinned for the floor was a high quality paint to begin. That's why I didn't suggest using the ceiling paint as the first coat. A small sample would be a good idea if that route is considered.
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Wow - thank you all for the additional information and feedback, it's greatly appreciated to say the least!
Given the feedback, I'll leave the ceiling paint in the can ;) Like my father used to say, if it's worth doing, it's worth doing right.
All good - seems I'm off to the paint store in the near future! (Cheap excuse to get something that is a bit off-white instead, just to prevent the "hospital" look).
Many thanks to all who contributed thoughts and ideas, it's great to get the information and first hand experience!
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1 Attachment(s)
Here's a photo of the floor finish.Attachment 450727