Paint to fresh plaster
Discussion
rash_decision said:
I don't bother mixing emulsion with water. I normally just buy some cheaper emulsion and give it a coat or two with that. It makes for a better finish in my opinion, without the risk of seeing the plaster through your finish coat.
That's wrong: new plaster is very porous & the first mist coats need thinning down so that they penetrate & adhere properly. If you see paint flaking off & showing new plaster underneath then you know the job was bodged & no mist coats were put on.Mr Pointy said:
rash_decision said:
I don't bother mixing emulsion with water. I normally just buy some cheaper emulsion and give it a coat or two with that. It makes for a better finish in my opinion, without the risk of seeing the plaster through your finish coat.
That's wrong: new plaster is very porous & the first mist coats need thinning down so that they penetrate & adhere properly. If you see paint flaking off & showing new plaster underneath then you know the job was bodged & no mist coats were put on.Never had an issue...
Yup. Mist coat, about 50/50. Should be matt (not vinyl). Probably find the second coat doesn't cover either if it's anything less than the best, so either prepare for a couple of coats of cheap stuff, or go thick with some nasty one coat stuff.
Don't use PVA, it's a bodge. You want the paint to soak in and adhere, not float as a skin on the surface (plus any damp/humidity runs the risk of the pva disolving and it turning patchy).
Don't use PVA, it's a bodge. You want the paint to soak in and adhere, not float as a skin on the surface (plus any damp/humidity runs the risk of the pva disolving and it turning patchy).
Deva Link said:
I'm struggling to imagine how you could even apply that unless you sprayed it on.
I tend to use thicker paint (Dulux superflat etc) cheaper paint (which most people will use as a mist coat/2nd coat) is thinner anyway so yes in general 50%/50% would be a better starting point for most.Mr Pointy said:
That's wrong: new plaster is very porous & the first mist coats need thinning down so that they penetrate & adhere properly. If you see paint flaking off & showing new plaster underneath then you know the job was bodged & no mist coats were put on.
I've done it this way on dozens of freshly plastered walls, and never had any issues whatsoever! No flaking or patchy coverage. The paint has been on the walls for years now!! I do use a cheaper emulsion for the base coat, and these are fairly thin in comparison with some of the better, big brand paints, maybe this is being absorbed???rash_decision said:
Mr Pointy said:
That's wrong: new plaster is very porous & the first mist coats need thinning down so that they penetrate & adhere properly. If you see paint flaking off & showing new plaster underneath then you know the job was bodged & no mist coats were put on.
I've done it this way on dozens of freshly plastered walls, and never had any issues whatsoever! No flaking or patchy coverage. The paint has been on the walls for years now!! I do use a cheaper emulsion for the base coat, and these are fairly thin in comparison with some of the better, big brand paints, maybe this is being absorbed???However in reading up, some people seem to have terrible trouble - entire rooms where the piant flakes off or crinkles up.
Sounds like the plaster was over-polished so the paint won't stick. I once plastered a wall and won't a bit over the top in the final dry trowel. Was incredibly polished, but the paint pealed off on the second coat. You could literally run a blunt scraper up the wall and take it back to fresh plaster - so much you couldn't tell it'd been painted!
Went over it with a sander to key it and all sorted.
Went over it with a sander to key it and all sorted.
Dennis99 said:
I used this recently and it worked fine.You can also use 'Wickes Trade Matt' white. I used this on fresh plaster and got a superb result. It can be watered down but I wouldn't go more than 50% as it is quite thin already. I think it states on the tub that it is fine for new plaster but I will have to check again.
I don't get this PVA thing, some people PVA the walls then paint over it. Personally I did not do this but some of my workmen say it does no harm and they do this regularly.
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