Internal painting
Discussion
Hi,
Just asked for some quotes to paint the walls and ceilings in a freshly plastered room and then the ceiling in another room that had just been plastered, both are 4x4m. I was amazed at the quotes I've been getting. They have been between £950 - £1200. Does this seem right ? I was budgeting around £500 for both.
Just asked for some quotes to paint the walls and ceilings in a freshly plastered room and then the ceiling in another room that had just been plastered, both are 4x4m. I was amazed at the quotes I've been getting. They have been between £950 - £1200. Does this seem right ? I was budgeting around £500 for both.
I am a time served painter and decorator the correct way to paint your ceilings is 3 coats of emulsion, 1st coat is some what thin with some pva adhesive 2cnd coat is thicker but not much and then the final finishing coat
Good quality paint ie Dulux correct for the job at hand is about 50 quid pva £1
Probably have to come to the job 3 times, if you have an empty room can be done a wee bit quicker
I will be generous and say 3 hours a coat for both ceilings , , that's9 hours easy count make it 10
Now hear is the hourly rate, to roll out my bed and travel 5 to 10 miles I would charge £22 per hour, if I had to go further or I was pushing my luck it would be £25 per hour
What I am saying is try and get a good painter on your door step
Is that London prices I am at Aberdeenshire and that is dear
Sorry didn't notice that the walls are to paint also so here we go
Material £100 _£120
Labour 15 hours say at above
Remember I have not seen the job and you cannot propose to a wife you have never seen
This is just a basic guide without seeing the job and knowing what you want ect Don't ps off a brother of brush by quoting me
Good luck
Good quality paint ie Dulux correct for the job at hand is about 50 quid pva £1
Probably have to come to the job 3 times, if you have an empty room can be done a wee bit quicker
I will be generous and say 3 hours a coat for both ceilings , , that's9 hours easy count make it 10
Now hear is the hourly rate, to roll out my bed and travel 5 to 10 miles I would charge £22 per hour, if I had to go further or I was pushing my luck it would be £25 per hour
What I am saying is try and get a good painter on your door step
Is that London prices I am at Aberdeenshire and that is dear
Sorry didn't notice that the walls are to paint also so here we go
Material £100 _£120
Labour 15 hours say at above
Remember I have not seen the job and you cannot propose to a wife you have never seen
This is just a basic guide without seeing the job and knowing what you want ect Don't ps off a brother of brush by quoting me
Good luck
Edited by blue bear on Tuesday 22 July 16:48
blue bear said:
I am a time served painter and decorator the correct way to paint your ceilings is 3 coats of emulsion, 1st coat is some what thin with some pva adhesive
I don't care if you are time served, that is not the correct method.Edited by blue bear on Tuesday 22 July 16:48
PVA? Only someone with no idea would use that st.
Robertos88 said:
I know. The more I'm thinking about this the more I think I could probably do this myself. I'm just worried about the finish.
If it is just emulsion then what can go wrong? A roller should give a nice smooth finish (if the walls are smooth) and as soon as you put a tasteful picture up of a tennis player scratching her backside no one will look at the paintwork anyway.Robertos88 said:
I know. The more I'm thinking about this the more I think I could probably do this myself. I'm just worried about the finish.
Decent paint, decent rollers and brushes and you're away, follow some guides on youtube and the web and you'll have it done in no time and save yourself a lot of money now and in the future.Having painted my first newly-plastered ceilings last year I'd say two normal coats of decent quality matt white emulsion would do it. I watered down the first coat like people said and it just made it patchy; I see no need to do this. If you get a roller with an extension handle you can do it all from floor level.
Then take the long handle off and do the walls. Home and dry for under £100.
Then take the long handle off and do the walls. Home and dry for under £100.
Simpo Two said:
newly-plastered ceilings -I watered down the first coat like people said and it just made it patchy; I see no need to do this.
Thought you would have known this.It's not ment as a part of the finish, it's purely to soak into the plaster.
Ideally you'd apply two mist coats, the second slightly stronger.
Do it yourself OP!
It's the easiest thing in the world. As ever preparation is key but if the walls are freshly plastered that's the hard work done. I'm self taught but very fussy and I always get there in the end.
Last year we wanted to have the landing, stairs and hallway done. I was too busy and knew we were just tidying it up to move house, so we thought we'd pay. No work for ole' Marky and a perfect finish too. Not so! I could have done better myself. I'm not saying every decorator was like this guy but I've used a few over the years and I've only been happy when I've done it myself.
Take your time and you'll be fine. It's rewarding when you have the room all finished and you can look around and know it's all your own work.
It's the easiest thing in the world. As ever preparation is key but if the walls are freshly plastered that's the hard work done. I'm self taught but very fussy and I always get there in the end.
Last year we wanted to have the landing, stairs and hallway done. I was too busy and knew we were just tidying it up to move house, so we thought we'd pay. No work for ole' Marky and a perfect finish too. Not so! I could have done better myself. I'm not saying every decorator was like this guy but I've used a few over the years and I've only been happy when I've done it myself.
Take your time and you'll be fine. It's rewarding when you have the room all finished and you can look around and know it's all your own work.
marky911 said:
Do it yersel' man OP!
It's the easiest thing in the world. As ever preparation is key but if the walls are freshly plastered that's the hard work done. I'm self taught but very fussy and I always get there in the end.
Last year we wanted to have the landing, stairs and hallway done. I was too busy and new we were just tidying it up to move house, so we thought we'd pay. No work for ole' Marky and a perfect finish too. Not so! I could have done better myself. I'm not saying every decorator was like this guy but I've used a few over the years and I've only been happy when I've done it myself.
Take your time and you'll be fine. It's rewarding when you have the room all finished and you can look around and know it's all your own work.
Often the case tbh. When it's your own house you might take 3 times longer than the painter who's on a price, but you can leave it totally flawless, take your time yet still save money.It's the easiest thing in the world. As ever preparation is key but if the walls are freshly plastered that's the hard work done. I'm self taught but very fussy and I always get there in the end.
Last year we wanted to have the landing, stairs and hallway done. I was too busy and new we were just tidying it up to move house, so we thought we'd pay. No work for ole' Marky and a perfect finish too. Not so! I could have done better myself. I'm not saying every decorator was like this guy but I've used a few over the years and I've only been happy when I've done it myself.
Take your time and you'll be fine. It's rewarding when you have the room all finished and you can look around and know it's all your own work.
Spudler said:
Simpo Two said:
newly-plastered ceilings -I watered down the first coat like people said and it just made it patchy; I see no need to do this.
Thought you would have known this.It's not ment as a part of the finish, it's purely to soak into the plaster.
Simpo Two said:
I know the theory, but having tried it I found it merely jeoparidised proceedings. I should have ignored 'advice' and followed my instincts!
My mates a painter and just uses two coats straight out of the tin, he usually uses Leyland Super Leytex for new plaster, Leyland do recommend the first coat should be 9-1 but he never has any problems with two 'full' coats. It covers new plaster easily with two coats, he can knock out a 3 bed semi in one day, excluding woodwork obviously, did I read earlier one coat on a ceiling = three hours
OP don't use PVA, it was used on some home makeover show years ago and some now think its the norm, no paint manufacturer recommends its use.
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