How To Decorate A Vinyl Wall Outside?

Discover how to enhance your outdoor space with creative wall decor using DécoVinyl™, a versatile material that can be used to hang various items such as plants, art, signs, and more. With the right materials, colors, textures, and features, you can create a stylish and private patio wall that reflects your style and personality.

In addition to these ideas, you can also create pop art murals or Moroccan-themed displays using color, pattern, lighting, and accessories. To install a vinyl siding hook, use the curved edge to wrap the hook to the underside of the siding. This method saves you the hassle of drilling and potentially damaging the wall.

To mount the sign, use simple vinyl siding clips that slide into the seam of your siding. This saves you the hassle of drilling and potentially damaging the wall. Place the sign on a clean flat surface and use a laminating protectant spray to protect it from moisture and UV fading.

DecoVinyl hangers are a great solution for hanging wall decor on vinyl siding without adding any holes or damage. Simply push the mount into your siding, add the hook, and attach your art of welcome home. This easy and effective way to hang decorations on vinyl siding is perfect for creating a unique and eye-catching look in your backyard, rooftop, or pool area.


📹 How to hang pictures on vinyl siding/ How to hang pictures on your wall outside

If you want to hang pictures on your vinyl siding outside, you will love this video! No more holes on you siding, no more damage.


📹 🔥 The ONLY Way To Install Vinyl Wall Base 🔥👺 Assuming You Want To Survive The Nightmare 👺

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How To Decorate A Vinyl Wall Outside
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Rafaela Priori Gutler

Hi, I’m Rafaela Priori Gutler, a passionate interior designer and DIY enthusiast. I love transforming spaces into beautiful, functional havens through creative decor and practical advice. Whether it’s a small DIY project or a full home makeover, I’m here to share my tips, tricks, and inspiration to help you design the space of your dreams. Let’s make your home as unique as you are!

Email: [email protected], [email protected]

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16 comments

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  • I gotta say this is the first how to article that got it right. This the exact way to install cove base. Some butchers use hot glue guns to get the outside corners to stay. Thats because they don’t know what the hell they are doing. Some will even make a slit on the bottom toe of the base on the outside corner to help it stay again that’s a big no no. Well done article my man keep it up. And I’m sure you’d rather work with the 120ft rolls makes for a cleaner looking job and faster also. After some time we all know how those cove base seams shrink up and gap. Well done my man. 👍👍👍👍👍

  • The glue spreads more even with a base adhesive nozzle and you don’t have to keep going back and forth I some time do my outside c corners one pice like u did depending on the kind of wall but more then often after time your corner is round at the top or off with your notch if u notch the top so I make two pieces and scribe one side with a vyinl tool divider, and it’s a perfect corner and it’s just as fast or maybe faster for some people your outside corner looks ok but I always see you tubers useing a carpet blade that’s awesome cause I only use a utility knife, sheet rock knife it’s easier to mark the corner and I scrape the wall and Mark it at the same time as I run my blade against the wall for my scribe line

  • I just recently started doing this for a commercial contractor I’m working with. He showed me how to do it in a few minutes and I’ve been doing it ever since. I’m a drywall contractor but hey if I’m taking down walls I’m also replacing the rubber base as well now! And the contractor couldn’t be more happier.

  • Wow – that is SO much more straightforward than the directions on the packages of cove base!! Seeing it done is worth a thousand words – ALL instructional youtube articles should be this to-the-point and well shot – some of them have good info but the article is so bad it’s useless. Not this one! Thanks a million – this makes is a whole lot less intimidating to do!

  • Excellent article… However the only thing you didn’t really cover is if you have to align one piece of cove base to an existing piece of cove base… for example you’re replacing a section and you have to get it to seem perfectly with the next piece and perhaps that seemed lies either in the center of a section or on the inside corner or the outside corner… Those are exceptional cases but it would be nice to cover those as well. Otherwise great article.

  • How do it get it to stick while the adhesive dries(24 hrs)? Nobody explains this; and it’s always perfect when you initially place it? It looks like it’s painted on. EVERY time I try, it doesn’t stick. I don’t have the time or energy to sit on the floor and do 1ft at a time. I’M OLD! It’s simple if you’ve done it before.

  • Not bad but there is one questionable issue here: the gluing. You didn’t properly apply glue to the outer wall edge part of the cove base. You’ll need more glue right where it bends to ensure it stays adhered to the wall at the edge properly. Glue should be put all the way up and down the height of the cove base at that place.

  • This is great of you’re in a hurry and don’t care about perfection. But if you want to do a any job, you’ll watch several articles to make a determination as to what’s important to you. Other pro’s will scribe the corner, trim each edge (basically like here, but more precisely), and hot glue that corner to keep it from puckering until the adhesive takes hold. And that’s why other articles are longer. But it’s up to you. Certainly this is good enough for many. Just my two cents.

  • I hope you still monitor comments/questions on your older articles. I want to install a cove base in my garage. I never noticed that the concrete is higher as it approaches the garage door and is well over 4 inches. This changes everything! How would you recommend installing that will still look nice without using cove base that is extremely tall in height?

  • I do not know much about this, but there must be a way to install vinyl wall baseboard without having to use glue. I am thinking maybe some sort of decorative moulded flashing, batten, etc made of wood, metal or vinyl which is then nailed/screwed to the wall that goes on the top of baseboard & then you just slide the top part of baseboard underneath it & there you have vinyl baseboard that can be easily removed when wall repair is needed & you do not damage the wall base nor the drywall. Then at inner & outer corners, you could put a couple of brads on the vinyl itself. Whatever the case, there must be a way so that the vinyl can be used over & over again when repair is required inside the wall & you have to remove the baseboard first. 01/02/24

  • Thanks for this article: informative and to-the-point. I had a new garage floor installed recently, and wanted to apply some gray cove base along two sections of drywall to give the garage a nice, finished look and keep water away from the drywall when I clean the floor. The finished product looks great. Your article helped me make short work of the job.

  • I purchased 120′ roll of Cove Base for my 20’x20′ garage. Three walls plus two 2′ sections on each side of bay door, all inside corners. One man job, should I try to do it all w/ one ~65′ piece or do back wall separate? Is there a technique to gluing/installing that length by myself (without glued side twisting onto floor)?

  • Question, I’ve noticed that most of the installs are done using 3-4 feet of rubber base, I like to install this in my garage and I have two sides that are straight with only 1 inside bend about 20 feet apart, feet. is it ok to run say 20 feet to the inside bend, then run another 20 feet or should I focus on short 4-6 feet lengths? my goal is to not have many cuts and look completely seamless. Between two of my walls in the garage I can run a continuous line of the rubber base molding for a solid 40 feet with only one inside bend. what do you think?

  • Got my base ordered for pickup and gonna tackle this over the weekend. With this basement remodel DIY I have had to teach me self how to build walls, how to hang and mud drywall, how to run electrical and how to paint walls so they don’t look like crap. Down to the last few steps now and hoping I can get this down as well.

  • I have seen several articles apply hot glue for the outside corner. Anybody else have experience with that? I would assume if you cut the right amount of material off and applied an ample portion of adhesive that should fine enough. I don’t know if hot glue is a overkill. Regardless, I think for small jobs the article is short and sweet.

  • Great article! I need to hire someone to install 240′ of rolled, vinyl base trim around the concrete floor and wallboard walls of my shop and garage. It is about 240 feet of wall with 24 inside corners and 12 outside corners. Questions: #1- How many hours should a job like this take with clean GWB walls and clean concrete with no obstacles in the way? #2- What is a fair (but not high!) price to pay someone to do this for the labor only? I already have the rolled vinyl and the adhesive. I only need the labor. We live in western Colorado so it’s not big city wages out here? Thank you!

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