Help with painting a bathroom
Help with painting a bathroom
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Wing Commander

Original Poster:

2,219 posts

256 months

Friday 11th March 2011
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Hi all,

I have recently painted a bathroom and I am now having problems with it. Some of the walls were smoothed down with plaster etc. Once completely smooth, I did a mist coat at approx 10% water, 90% paint. Once dry, I then painted the walls in 100% paint.

The paint is bathroom paint so is water resistant I guess.

The paint is now experiencing very fine cracks all over. As I understand it, this is because the wall is drying out, but isn't the mist coat meant to stop this?

And finally, how can I fix it? Don't mind repainting etc if necessary.

Thanks

Fossilface

3,286 posts

222 months

Friday 11th March 2011
quotequote all
How long did you leave the plaster to dry?
You should leave it for at least a week I believe, maybe even 2.

IMO sealing with water and paint doesn't work very well, particularly in a damp room like a bathroom.
I did this on the bathroom ceiling and had mould problems.
I redid it with Dulux plaster sealant and It hasn't happened again.

Wing Commander

Original Poster:

2,219 posts

256 months

Friday 11th March 2011
quotequote all
OK so that might explain a few things! hehe

Probably only left it a couple of days.

Now that there is paint on all the walls, what is the best approach? Obviously the paint has all these small cracks but it isn't flacking off anywhere. What is the best way to take it all off? Is that necessary or can I just seal over the top??

Thanks

Fossilface

3,286 posts

222 months

Friday 11th March 2011
quotequote all
TBH, I'm not sure.
When we bought our house, the plaster on the walls in our bathroom was all cracked.
What we did was to paper the walls with smooth backing paper and painted it with a bathroom emulsion and it has been fine. That was several years ago.
I think it was called DIY Doctor and it is like A4 paper.

shirt

25,077 posts

225 months

Friday 11th March 2011
quotequote all
i think i know what you mean - looks like it's old cracked paint rather than fresh?

tbh i don't know, my attic room went like this and that plaster is as old as the previous owners' renovations - mid 90s.

i solved it by using ronseal flexible undercoat before repainting.

blaineuk

2,615 posts

271 months

Thursday 17th March 2011
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What was on the Walls in the first place? my guess would be wall paper, and the problem you now have is the old paste trapped under the paint.

J-Tuner

2,855 posts

267 months

Friday 18th March 2011
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If it was me i would probably rub the walls down lightly with sandpaper and paint it again in the same paint but go on thick with it....but i would leave it a good week or two first and really make sure the plaster has dried and contracted as much as it needs. If condensation/moisture is an issue i would allow even more time and get some fresh air in there after showers etc..