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Repair

Wall Repairs

Anything from a single nail hole to a full wall section, finished to match.

Wall Repairs — recent project by The Drywall Artisan

Walls take the most abuse in any home — and they're the easiest place for an amateur repair to show. We fix walls so you can't find the patch.

— What's included

  • Anchor holes
  • Doorknob holes
  • Drywall section replacement
  • Old-fashioned plaster patching
  • Outside-corner bead replacement
  • Texture and sheen matching

— Why it matters

Done right the first time.

Wall Repairs done well disappears. Done poorly, you see every seam, every shadow, every patch — for years. Coats need time to dry. Texture needs to match. Edges need to feather into the existing wall.

We work with USG-grade materials, plan the job in stages, and finish each step before moving to the next. The result is a wall or ceiling that looks like nothing was ever wrong.

— Signs you need this

If you've noticed any of these, give us a call.

Small drywall problems rarely stay small. Catching them early keeps the repair simple, the cost low, and the result invisible under paint.

  • Cracks reopening along seams or corners
  • Sagging, soft spots, or staining on ceilings
  • Nail or screw pops appearing in walls
  • Visible patches, shadows, or texture mismatches
  • Damage after furniture, doors, or moves
  • Walls that look 'off' under raking light

— Materials & standards

What goes into a wall repairs job.

We pick the right board, tape, and compound for the job — and we don't cut corners on either materials or dry time.

USG-grade board

Standard, mold-resistant, Type X, and abuse-resistant board specified to the job.

Paper tape on flats

Embedded in fresh compound — stronger and cleaner than mesh on butt and flat seams.

Setting compound

Hot mud where strength and short dry times matter; lightweight finish coats on top.

Three coats minimum

Every joint floated three times, each wider than the last, sanded between.

— What sets us apart

Four things you'll notice on day one.

Licensed & insured

Full general liability coverage, BBB accredited, certificates on request.

Honest timing

Free written estimates inside 24 hours and arrival windows we actually keep.

Dust-controlled work

Plastic containment, drop cloths, and vacuum-sanding so the rest of your home stays livable.

One craftsman

Jim sees every job from estimate to walk-through — no rotating crews, no surprises.

— The craft behind it

Why wall repairs take longer than people think.

On paper, drywall looks fast: hang a board, run some tape, sand it down. In practice, almost every step has a wait built into it. Joint compound has to dry — not skin over, but cure all the way through — before the next coat can go on. Skip that, and the seam will telegraph through paint within a season.

A wall repairs job is really a sequence of short visits stitched together by drying time. We plan the schedule around that, not around rushing back the same day. Three coats means three trips. Texture means a fourth. Each one is short — but each one has to happen.

The other half of the craft is the part you don't see: the corner that's actually plumb, the butt joint that lands on a stud instead of in the field, the backing block added so a future fastener has something to grab. Done right, none of it is visible. Done wrong, you find out two years later when a crack walks across the ceiling.

— Common scenarios

Jobs that usually start with a phone call about wall repairs.

Every project is a little different, but most wall repairs calls fall into a handful of patterns we see week after week.

The DIY that didn't take

A patch was attempted, the texture doesn't match, and now there's a halo of mud visible under every light. We sand it back, re-tape, and re-spray the texture so the whole area reads as one surface.

Years of small damage

Anchor holes, furniture scuffs, kids, dogs, a couple of TV mounts that moved. None of it is dramatic on its own, but the room is starting to look tired. We walk the space, list every spot, and quote the whole room at once.

Pre-listing prep

House is going on the market in a few weeks. Cracks, popped nails, and old patches all need to disappear before photos. Quick turnaround, paint-ready finish, and clean handoff to the painter.

— What drives the price

An honest look at the estimate.

We give written estimates inside 24 hours. Here's what we're actually weighing when we put a number on a wall repairs job.

Size & access

Square footage of the affected area, ceiling height, stair access, and how much material has to be carried in and out.

Finish level

Level 4 is the residential standard. Level 5 (skim-coated) is needed under gloss paint or strong raking light, and takes an extra coat across the entire surface.

Texture match

Smooth walls are quickest. Knockdown, orange peel, and hand-trowel patterns add a sampling step and a return trip for the spray.

Substrate condition

Old plaster, water-damaged framing, or layered wallpaper underneath all change the prep — and the timeline.

Coordination

Working around installed cabinets, flooring, or other trades takes longer than an empty room. We price the protection and the slower pace honestly.

— What to expect

From the moment we pull into the driveway.

01

Morning

We text 30 minutes out, walk the space with you one more time, lay down floor protection, and seal off the work area with plastic and zip walls where it makes sense.

02

Midday

Cuts, hanging, and tape happen first — the loudest part of the day. We break for lunch off-site so the house stays quiet, then start the first coat of mud.

03

Between visits

Compound is allowed to dry fully — usually overnight. Most jobs require two to four return trips spread across a week, each shorter than the last.

04

Final day

Vacuum-assisted sanding, texture matching, a thorough cleanup, and a walk-through with you. We don't call it done until you sign off on the finish under your own lights.

— Mistakes we fix

The shortcuts that come back to bite.

A surprising amount of our wall repairs work is fixing other people's work. Here's what we see most often.

  • Mesh tape on flat seams

    Mesh is fine on butt joints with setting compound, but on flats it lets the seam crack through. We strip and re-tape with paper embedded in fresh mud.

  • Skipping the second and third coat

    One thick coat looks done — until it shrinks. We float three coats, each wider than the last, so the seam disappears into the field.

  • Sanding into the paper

    Over-sanding fuzzes the paper face and shows through paint. We block-sand by hand on flats and stop the second the surface is flat.

  • No backing on a patch

    A patch without backing flexes every time someone leans on it. Eventually it cracks. We add a wood or board cleat behind every patch larger than a few inches.

"Jim showed up when he said he would, kept the site clean, and the finish looks like the wall was never touched. Exactly what we hoped for."

— Homeowner · Omaha metro

— Recent work

Wall Repairs in the field.

See full gallery
Wall Repairs project
Wall Repairs project
Wall Repairs project

— Our process

How wall repairs get done.

01

Size up

Decide whether to patch, cut-and-replace, or skim the whole wall.

02

Prep

Clean cuts, backing, and a contained work area.

03

Finish

Tape, mud, and sand in three coats minimum.

04

Match

Texture and feather edges so the repair blends.

— Common questions

FAQ

Can a wall ever be fully matched after a big repair?
Yes — with proper texture and a careful feather, even large repairs become invisible under paint.
Do you replace damaged corner bead?
Yes. Bent or cracked corner bead is cut out, replaced, and refinished.

Ready to get a quote?