Removing battens on old wood panel walls
Hi there - have been lurking here for a while but thought it was time to emerge from the shadows and introduce myself (and start picking brains :wink:). I have just bought a renovator's nightma….sorry, DELIGHT, and moved in a month ago. Embarked on my vision with great enthusiasm, but very quickly ran up against the solid brick wall of my own inexperience and DIY ineptitude…local tradespeople will very soon come to love me, as I have accepted there are a LARGE number of things I can't do myself!
Luckily, "major" stuff (electrics, gas, plumbing, re-stumping, exterior weatherboarding, paths and verandahs) were all completed in the few years before I bought the place, so the vast majority of the stuff I have to do is cosmetic. However, the house was built in around the 1920s, and the décor….well let's just say I pulled up some lino in the back kitchen and it had been under-laid with newspapers from February 1931, so there is some work to be done!
So here is my first question - having searched the forum I can't find an exact answer so I hope someone can help me out...
All the interior walls in my place consist of plywood (or similar - very thin wood board) nailed over studs, and then the panel joins are covered with thin "battens" of wood (photo attached). I want to get rid of all these horizontal and vertical battens to make flush walls. How do I do this? The battens come off easily (and thankfully don't take the boards with them) but what is the best way to fill the gap (only 1mm or so in the ones I've pulled off so far) and then cover the join so it doesn't show under paint? Do I just have to apply crack filler (that's a lot of filler) - in which case I assume I then need to sand back? - or is there some other clever technique (tape or something) that is more usual.
Any and all suggestions gratefully received. I will be back with the next question forthwith…
TCX