The paint has peeled off the drywall due to moisture seeping through the walls, poor adhesion of the paint, or improper preparation of the surface before painting.
If by top layer you mean the paper, then re-install drywall on that wall.
To fix peeled drywall, you can follow these steps: Scrape off any loose or peeling paint or drywall compound. Apply a coat of primer to the affected area. Use joint compound to fill in any gaps or cracks. Sand the area smooth once the compound is dry. Apply a new coat of paint to match the surrounding wall.
To fix paint that has peeled off the wall, you will need to scrape off the loose paint, sand the area smooth, apply a primer, and then repaint the surface with matching paint.
The paint is peeling off the drywall because of poor adhesion, moisture issues, or improper surface preparation.
To fix peeled drywall in your home, start by removing any loose or damaged pieces. Then, apply a thin layer of joint compound to fill in the peeled areas. Smooth it out with a putty knife and let it dry completely. Sand the area lightly, apply a second coat if needed, and then paint over it to match the rest of the wall.
To repair peeled drywall, start by removing any loose or damaged pieces. Then, apply a coat of joint compound to fill in the peeled area. Smooth it out with a putty knife and let it dry. Sand the area until it is smooth, then apply a second coat if needed. Finally, prime and paint the repaired area to match the rest of the wall.
Try to peel it off after it drys. If you are lucky it will only take the paint off with it. If it is stuck to the paper, you will have to repair the drywall.
To effectively repair peeled drywall in your home, follow these steps: Clean the area by removing any loose debris or paint. Apply a coat of primer to the damaged area. Use joint compound to fill in the peeled area, smoothing it out with a putty knife. Sand the area once the compound is dry. Apply a second coat of joint compound if needed. Sand again and then paint over the repaired area to match the rest of the wall.
Latex paint, when it dries, may be able to be peeled off provided it hasn't been baked into the fiber.
take it to the shop. ask the people about it, then repaint it.
You have a problem with the drywall. It is not a problem with the paint. Most likely it is moisture or some kind of contamination on the wall that is pulling it off the drywall. Another issue to consider is if you have too many coats on the wall the weight of all the coats of paint can cause stress and pull everything off. If the paint is not peeling everywhere and is just peeling in certain places the paint did not fail. (Paint does not choose where it will peel and where it will adhere).
Almost anything you do WILL take off the top layer of paint and possibly drywall paper so be prepared to recover it with mud and sand it down.