Renovating an Edwardian property where the plaster has blown. Used three different plasterers (recommended by people on local FB groups) and found all three to be pretty poor.
The ones that did the bedrooms applied thin stripwood to the existing casing as they had made the replacement plaster proud and said they did this to make it easy to architrave.
Fast forward a few months later and I'm ready to add the woodwork to the bedrooms and I can get my head around this. They have applied wood about a foot short on both sides. Also given the door stops are already cut into the casing, these strips would mean refitting the original doors wouldn't line up.
Given we are talking less than 5mm difference between plaster and original casing am I better off just removing these strips and using a foam adhesive to apply the architrave?
The ones that did the bedrooms applied thin stripwood to the existing casing as they had made the replacement plaster proud and said they did this to make it easy to architrave.
Fast forward a few months later and I'm ready to add the woodwork to the bedrooms and I can get my head around this. They have applied wood about a foot short on both sides. Also given the door stops are already cut into the casing, these strips would mean refitting the original doors wouldn't line up.
Given we are talking less than 5mm difference between plaster and original casing am I better off just removing these strips and using a foam adhesive to apply the architrave?