Tips to Improve Your DIY Plastering
Plastering is considered by many to be an art form
and rightly so, as even most professional builders and keen DIY enthusiasts
will not tackle a plastering job, preferring instead to recruit a professional
plasterer. However, undoubtedly, here at Sentric Design, we
believe that plastering is a skill that can be learnt quite quickly and quite
painlessly even for the novice DIY-er.
The following is a list of what we consider
to be the best plastering tips for the complete novice. Have fun and don't
forget to try check out our complete plastering how to guide.
Plastering Tip
#1: Prepare your surface before beginning plastering.
Most people overlook this very crucial
stage when contemplating plastering for the first time, after all,
the reason you no doubt want to plaster is to
cover over an ugly, uneven or unstable surface. However, preparing your surface properly
prior to plastering is essential to achieving a perfect plastering
finish and
one that won't start to fall
away in chunks after you have finished decorating and sat down to a
nice cup of tea.
Plaster will not adhere securely to any
surface that is wallpapered, damp, dusty or unstable without some prior
preparation.
The secret is to remove any loose areas
of existing plaster, dust or paper as much as you can before even contemplating
plastering. Next, the surface must be treated with a mixture of PVA glue and
water (the exact mixture depends on your type and is covered in our plastering
course in some detail). This has two main purposes:
1.Firstly,
as a primer for your plastering surface. The aim here is to allow the PVA
solution to dry thus reducing the suction (or thirst) of the wall. Left
untreated, a surface with a high suction can literally draw the water out of
the plaster before it has had a chance to set, thereby weakening the plaster
skim coat and increasing the chances of the plaster falling away at a later
stage (known as "blown" plaster).
2.Secondly, in
all cases, a three parts to one mixture of PVA and water must be applied
immediately prior to plastering and it is essential that the plaster is applied
while this coating is still wet. This helps bond the plaster to the surface. A
top tip is to test the surface with your hand - if the mixture still feels wet
then you need to wait a little while, if the and when the surface feels just
tacky is the ideal time to start your first skim coat of plaster.
Plastering Tip #2: Get your plaster mix just
right.
Mixing plaster
is not a fine art but there are some
basic rules to follow: Always
add the plaster to the water and never the other way around. A top tip is to first add just enough plaster so
that it heaps
on top of the water and mix this in first until lump free.
Then add smaller amounts of plaster by
hand until the consistency
is
smooth and lump free. You should
be aiming for the consistency of melting ice cream and the
plaster should sit on the bucket trowel without sliding off when
held level when its ready.
By far the best tip for mixing
plaster is to test the consistency by standing a stick in the mix. If the stick
can stand of it's own accord then the plaster is mixed right. Plaster and water
mix in volume on roughly a 50:50 basis so half a bucket of water will make a
full bucket of plaster.
Plastering Tip #3: Don't bite off
more than you can chew.
This is perhaps one of the most
common mistakes made by novice plasterers and is made all the worse by the fact
that most untrained plasterers don't realise that a perfect finish in
plastering comes not from applying it carefully but by working all six stages
of plastering (from application of both coats to dry and wet trowlling
right through to final polishing) quickly and at the right timing.
Obviously, all of this is too much
to explain here which is why you should feel free to get in
touch with at Sentric Design for
your perfect finish in detail.

Don't try and get the surface perfectduring this first coat as it is gradually improved at later stages
of the various drying stages of
the plaster. Using this technique not only makes plastering quicker and less
painless but conversely results in a perfect finish ever time compared to
trying to get too good a finish on your first go.
Plastering Tip #4: Cleanliness is
the key to a perfect finish.
Don't get
me wrong, this is not a moral point, you might be a candidate for the next episode of "How Clean is your house"at home and that's fine with me, but cleaning as you go in plastering is probably the best
plastering tip I was
ever given when I first learnt to plaster and there is a
simple reason for this:
ANY contamination
in your plaster will result in either the plaster setting or going off too quickly and since plastering is a race
against the clock for the novice and a steady but fragile rhythm
for the pro, anything which reduces the time you have to complete your job is ultimately
going to cause more work than less. It's therefore
a poor economy of time to not
wash
out buckets and equipment as you go.
Furthermore, even the tiniest fleck
of dried plaster from a previous mix will cause pulls and drags in your plaster
finish and frustrate the hell out of you - image having got a surface just
perfect only to dredge a line right back to the plasterboard with your next
stroke!
This is even more frustrating when
you are in the latter stages of plastering so here is my golden rule of tips:
If the water isn't clean enough to drink and your buckets and tools not clean
enough to eat out of then don't use them for plastering until you have given
them a thorough clean.
Plastering Tip #5: Don't
over-polish your surface or you will regret it.

However, that said, one tip I am
always giving to novice plasterers
is DON'T over-polish on the final stage. Yes, if you follow my course
exactly you will be able to get a plaster surface so
flat and so smooth that you can literally polish it until
it is a smooth as glass and
even shows a slight reflection but you don't want
this.
The ideal plaster finish looks and
feels to the touch like eggshell and there is one very
important reason for this paint and wallpaper will
peel from a highly polished surface
and when you get that situation you are in big trouble because you will
find it peels easily in some areas and sticks rock hard in other - completely
ruining your plaster finish. So my final plastering tip is to not get too
carried away in polishing in the final dry trowel stage.
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