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Drywall repair is a fairly simple process. Just follow these steps. The first thing to do is clean the area of any loose plaster. It is recommended to use a vacuum cleaner. The dust can be extremely unpleasant if it should get in a cut or scratch. The next thing you need to do is make the hole larger (if you have a dent ignore this step). It is necessary to make the hole into a regular shape, like a square, triangle, rectangle, etc. The only way to do this is cut out more. This serves two purposes, it removes any damaged drywall from the edges, and it gives you a much easier shape to measure.
Measure your hole. Use a piece of scrap drywall or drywall replacement (available at most hardware stores) to cut your replacement patch. It needs to be the same size or slightly smaller, about an 1/8 inch. Check the fit against the hole and sand off any lumps that prevent a good fit.
If you have a dent, go ahead and follow this last step. Take the wall-patching compound (mud) and liberally spread it on the patching tape. Place patching tape on your patch, which is now in place. Smooth the surface using your trowel. Don't worry if you have a few uneven areas. Make sure you work out from the patch, trying to blend it in to the rest of the wall. Let it sit for 24 hrs.
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Mississippi's generally hilly landscape reaches its highest point (806 ft/246 m) in the northeastern corner of the state along the Tennessee River. The most distinctive region in the state's varied topography is the Mississippi Delta, a flat alluvial plain between the Mississippi and the Yazoo rivers in the western part of the state. A wide belt of longleaf yellow pine (the piney woods) covers most of southern Mississippi to within a few miles of the coastal-plain grasslands. Important there are lumbering and allied industries. Most of the state's rivers belong to either the Mississippi or the Alabama river systems, with the Pontoctoc Ridge the divide. The climate of Mississippi is subtropical in the southern part of the state and temperate in the northern part; the average annual rainfall is more than 50 in. (127 cm).
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