






🛠️ Transform your walls like a pro—no experience needed!
The Patelai Knockdown Texture Sponge is a 2-piece set of durable, reusable porous sponges sized 13x15x6 cm, designed for easy DIY drywall and ceiling texture repairs. Ideal for matching various knockdown textures, it offers a compact, mess-free solution with beginner-friendly instructions, making it perfect for home decorators, handymen, and renovation pros seeking efficient, professional results without specialized tools.









| ASIN | B08MQM5M6N |
| Best Sellers Rank | #77,317 in Office Products ( See Top 100 in Office Products ) #86 in Paint Sponges |
| Brand | Patelai |
| Color | White/Light |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (1,562) |
| Date First Available | 17 January 2021 |
| Item Weight | 27.2 g |
| Material | sponge |
| Product Dimensions | 11.99 x 10.01 x 5.99 cm; 27.22 g |
| Special Features | Durable ft, Reusable |
Q**N
I soaked them in a small bucket of warm water about 15 minutes and they expanded to the fullest. Squeeze water out, let them air dry and they were ready to use. Good product
M**T
I have the old popcorn looking texture in a couple of rooms. These texture sponges work. They match exactly to the popcorn texture. Worth the money.
W**Y
They are good sponges that work ok. You might have to do some further shaping to get the degree of knockdown texture you want, but that's a personal preference. They certainly worked to help me finish a touch-up area.
A**R
You have to get the sponge wet first and let it dry to expand! When I first opened this, I was very concerned and immediately ran to the one- star reviews. It’s a totally flat weird looking pair of “sponges” that come inside of a tightly vacuum sealed plastic piece. Even after sitting on my shelf open for a week, one of them had maintained complete flatness and the other had perked up only slightly. I planned to return them, but when I looked at the other reviews, I realized some people have pictures of good sponges and other people had pictures that looked like mine. So I decided to take one of the flat weird looking objects and get it wet under warm, running water. It started to fluff up a little, but not much. I then set it on the counter and left it for the day. When I came back later, I was almost laughing because it looked so different. it had fluffed up into an awesome looking sponge. I then added water to the other sponge and it fluffed up within a few minutes. I’m gonna include pictures of before and after, which are both from today. The sponges worked great for adding multiple paint layers to my project. They are able to do both light amounts of color placement and thicker texturing paint, depending on what you are going for.
H**R
Okay, not going to bury the lede, these things did an outstanding job. I had to repair a huge water leak in a bathroom ceiling, I lost half the room's ceiling so I replaced the drywall and had to try to match the existing knockdown texture on the other half of the ceiling. I used these sponges and the result is just seamless, nobody could tell there was ever a repair done. So they're good sponges and they get a five-star review for the results. But you also gotta know a couple of things. First, what you get is not what you think you're getting. You don't get a fluffy squishy sponge, instead you get something that looks like a nasty old McDonald's Happy Meal hamburger that's been vacuum-sealed in a NASA space meal pouch. It's a little tiny flat squished thing that would absolutely not pass any "is this a sponge?" test. Second, you gotta inflate it. They say leave it in a pan of water for a little while. Screw that, I left one in a pan of water and it took like TWO DAYS to fully fluff up. If you don't have two days to wait, submerge it in water and work it, squeeze it, roll it, smush it, etc, until it finally becomes a small half-dome shape. It'll get about as big as your palm, flat on one side and rounded on the other, and probably smaller than you were expecting. Don't sweat it, it's all good; once you get to that point you've got what you need. Then start the texturing job. Thin down some all-purpose joint compound in a drywall pan, and let it "set up" for about 10 minutes or so. Then smush the flat side of the sponge into it, then sqlorch it onto the ceiling, press it in, and then yank the sponge away quickly. You're trying to "draw out" the compound to stick out away from the ceiling, making little stalagtites. Do that for a while, I think I probably did it in about a 3' x 3' area before knocking it down with a rubber-edged knockdown knife. If it looks good and matches up, then go on to the next 3x3 area. If it looks bad, you can just re-sqlorch it and try again until you get it the way you want. It's a long tedious process, but the end result I got is absolutely fantastic. If you want to see a video, I watched Paul Peck's youtube drywall channel on matching knockdown texture and it tells you everything you need to know.
TrustPilot
1天前
1 个月前