Not logged in [
Login
-
Register
]
You Are Not Registered Or Not Logged In
Corsa Sport
»
Message Board
»
Off Day
»
House Day
»
Painting plastered walls
» Post Reply
Post Reply
Who Can Post?
All users can post new topics and all users can reply.
Icon:
Formatting Mode:
Normal
Advanced
Help
Andale Mono
Arial
Arial Black
Book Antiqua
Century Gothic
Comic Sans MS
Courier New
Georgia
Impact
Tahoma
Times New Roman
Trebuchet MS
Script MT Bold
Stencil
Verdana
Lucida Console
-2
-1
1
2
3
4
5
6
White
Black
Red
Yellow
Pink
Green
Orange
Purple
Blue
Beige
Brown
Teal
Navy
Maroon
LimeGreen
Message:
HTML is Off
Smilies are On
BB Code is On
[img] Code is On
[quote][i]Originally posted by Dee25790[/i] [quote][i]Originally posted by richardworrall[/i] Right, stripped the crappy paper off the bedroom walls. Its revealed nice fresh plaster coverings on all walls that have prob only been done within the year, we moved in July and the previous bloke only had it a year. Wanting to paint but unsure whats best to do: The plaster has only had a slight whitewash in places, other parts are not coated. Therefore do i need to precoat it first with a water/paint solution before emulsioning, or It it better to put up lining paper then paint that? Thoughts :look: [/quote] Just finished this on a fully refurbed house. Depends how much time you want to put into this.. Fresh plaster - pva/water mix or whitewash - this is you choice arguments for both Sand - 120 go over the plaster take the lumps bumps nodules out of it any holes fill then sand back to flat Paint- first coat about 10% water Sand- 180 grit barely have to touch it more rubbing your hand over the wall whilst holding it usually doesn't even take weight of your hand. Paint - now apply your last coat. Once your roller goes of Make sure it doesn't come back off the wall, vertical movements, do a whole wall then start on the next wall once you finish that one go back to the start of your first wall (the idea being give the paint a few mins to tack off a little bit) don't load any extra paint on your roller and run the roller over the wall again vertical strokes to roll out any lines left from paint application. Unless your wall needs another coat your done. If it needs another coat or you just want to give it one sand again with 180 and start the paint applying process again. Use quality rollers and if possibly a roller pole that way you can go bottom of wall to top in one smooth fluid motion. Using this technique from start to finish gives a fantastic finish even in silk! B&Q sell Leyland white or cream in their trade catalogue for 16 excl VAT paint like this is great I've used loads of the stuff! Hope that helps bud [/quote]
Post Options:
Disable smileys?
Turn BBCode off?
Receive email notification of new replies?
This is a long topic, click
here
to review it.