Is size really important?

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DrPhill

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Now why did that get your attention? :lol:

We are having some walls plastered, and I have heard that size is important. I assume that size just 'seals' the surface and makes the the plaster less absorbent. We are planning to paint the plaster - would diluted paint do the job? Or would dilute pva glue work better?

Thanks in advance for any advice,

Phill
 
The guy doing a wall at work used dilute PVA. I assumed he knew what he was doing but I guess that doesn't mean it was the only way.
 
Just water down the first coat of paint. I have worked with a few decorators over the years and they prefer just paint. If you use a watered down pva mix it just sits on the surface and the paint can be just peeled off. ;)
 
carlb40":2ilwl2in said:
Just water down the first coat of paint. I have worked with a few decorators over the years and they prefer just paint. If you use a watered down pva mix it just sits on the surface and the paint can be just peeled off. ;)

Would have been nice if the previous owners had done that under the wood-chip paper..... before painting it! #-o
 
Ahhhhh woodchip, they were probably thinking of you when they put it. Knowing you like woodwork. :lol:


It could have been worse, it could have been vinyl paper :shock:
 
Leave the plaster for a week to dry out properly then use some B&Q Value (or similar) emulsion watered down 50/50 for a mist coat. This will seal the fresh plaster :) HTH
 
Pva dries too fast and sits on the surface as said above. I think you need a ******** version of pva ( unsure of name but reading the back it was basically a very thin - slow drying pva - possibly granfix but unsure )
other than that watered down emulsion in a THIN coat - -don't slap it all over or the surface can dry and trap the damp underneath - i found this the hard way when my plaster started to blow a few days after painting.
It was only the very outer surface and easily remedied with a bit of filler but still not the best thing to be doing to a freshly plastered wall.
 
MMUK":i0gmy6v7 said:
Leave the plaster for a week to dry out properly then use some B&Q Value (or similar) emulsion watered down 50/50 for a mist coat. This will seal the fresh plaster :) HTH

+1, may take a bit longer than a week in some cases but dont miss out doing a mist coat or you will regret it later when your nice expensive paint starts to peel away from the wall like sunburned skin :shock:
 
Sizing the plaster work prior to papering acted as a sealer and help stop the paste drying out too quickly.
Today a lot of decorators "size" with the paste, it is not a good base for emulsion, as it's too soft.
As you are painting the new plaster, when it's dry, use a slip coat, or mist coat of 50/50 emulsion, (NOT silk as a slipcoat)
I personally don't hold with using cheap paint as a slip coat, The slip coat is doing an important job and I don't see the point in trying to save a couple of pounds cost to slip coat a room.
cheap paint, habits and brushes gets you a cheap looking job.
Plus I have seen the difference in the colour of an odd wall because the slip coat was white and the existing was not.
Unibond/pva tends to set hard, as a sealer and quite often emulsion will not "take" or adhere so well.
HTH Regards Rodders
 
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