Because "vertical cracks" can refer to two very different things— or hairline fractures in natural teeth —I have written a comprehensive article focused on the most common usage: vertical cracks in concrete and masonry foundations.
Depending on the severity and location, you have a few options: For Drywall (Cosmetic) vertical cracks
That night, you dreamed of the house before you were born. An empty lot. A single tree. A woman in a long coat digging a trench with her bare hands. She wasn’t burying anything. She was opening something. When she turned to look at you, her face was your mother’s, then yours, then a face you would wear in twenty years—older, wearier, with vertical lines etched beside your mouth like parentheses holding a secret too heavy to speak. Because "vertical cracks" can refer to two very
While vertical cracks are generally less dangerous than horizontal ones, they are not always harmless. You need to assess the severity based on three factors: A single tree
You reached in. Something reached back.