I am seeking advice on painting a ceiling which has recently been
replastered. Presently, applying the paint means it just dissapears into
the plaster. ISTR reading walls should be 'prepared' using some kind of
glue, possibly 'upvc'. Does anyone know about this? Can you offer me
some advice on where to get such glue? or any alternatives to use?
Also, does anyone have any experience of using a 'paint stick' as sold
by qvcuk.com to apply the paint, any tips on usage and where to buy one
from as qvc don't have stock and the people at B&Q have no idea what I'm
talking about. For reference, it's like an oversized syringe with a
roller on the end, you dip the stick into a pot of paint, pull the
handle and this draws paint up the handle of the stick, you then push on
the bottom of the handle and the paint comes out at the roller end.
Thanks.
You are over complicating a very simple job.
What you need is a roller and a pole, a brush, some emulsion paint and a
roller tray.
Do the corners with a brush, and also around any light firttings - yes the
first coat will soak right in, but this simply means that you can give it 2
or 3 coats in the same day, less cleaning up, less wasted paint, less wasted
time, and at the end of it all, a better job done.
Don't bother with pva sealant - no painter in the trade uses this - it
simply stops the first coat sticking to the plaster and makes it dry
unevenly, making subsequent coats a pain in the arse.
Dead right. IME any gadget designed to make painting easier & sold on the
telly will be rubbish. If any of these gadgets really worked pro painters
would use them - and they don't.
--
Dave
The Medway Handyman
www.medwayhandyman.co.uk
01634 717930
07850 597257
I tend to agree, BUT, the best 'gadget' I ever bought (from EBay so it was
cheap) is an Earlex Cordless Paint system
http://www.earlex.co.uk/html/cps_html/pr9.htm. It is an absolute Godsend
when painting the Hall, Stairs & Landing. No more balancing a tray on the
plank you are walking on or having to get up and down ladders all the time.
It uses D cell batteries but a set of Duracell type last ages. I wouldn't
use it on a small paint job though due to the cleaning up etc, but if you
can get one cheaply enough I would say "Go for it".
Cheers
John
> Also, does anyone have any experience of using a 'paint stick' as sold
> by qvcuk.com to apply the paint, any tips on usage and where to buy one
> from as qvc don't have stock and the people at B&Q have no idea what I'm
> talking about. For reference, it's like an oversized syringe with a
> roller on the end, you dip the stick into a pot of paint, pull the
> handle and this draws paint up the handle of the stick, you then push on
> the bottom of the handle and the paint comes out at the roller end.
<http://www.homeright.com/showcat.asp?cat=1> US, but might lead to
something? Never used one - I use rollers myself.
David
[snip]
Hi,
You are quite right to avoid 'sealing' the plaster with PVA. What you
should do is apply what those in the trade would call a "piss" coat. I
assume it is so called because it is as runny as treacle? :-)
For your first coat on fresh plaster, mix your emulsion 50/50 with
water. It will flick and fling everywhere but will take the suction out
of the plaster.
Some say the second coat should be 75/25 paint/water followed by the
final 100% paint coat. I've read the same instructions, but not done it
myself.
Personally (and believe me I've decorated shitloads of m2 of fresh
plaster), one 50/50 paint/water piss coat followed by one (or depending
on paint quality, maybe two) final coats of paint should do you.
Hth
Someone
In the midst of painting ceilings one Sunday two years ago, I saw the
paint-stick demonstrated on QVC and thought ; - 'that looks good'. By the
time I got around to ordering it was 'Out of Stock'; a coupe of minutes with
the computer revealed that a near-by (ish) branch of Argos had one in
stock - I reserved it -popped onto a bus - cheaper than parking - and an
hour or so later - I was paint-sticking the ceiling! I'm convinced that the
time-out was recovered using the paint-stick. Cleaning is not as quick as
they claim; or I've not got the knack. My wife can't use it - the full paint
stick is very heavy to raise above head level - it requires a knack - and a
certain strength - to push the plunger and roll the roller while keeping
contact. Nevertheless; I think it's a good _addition_ to a painting
inventory of brushes, rollers and pads. Using it one can get an enormous
area covered very quickly.
--
Brian
> >Hi,
>
> >I am seeking advice on painting a ceiling which has recently been
> >replastered. Presently, applying the paint means it just dissapears
> >into the plaster.
> Hi,
>
> You are quite right to avoid 'sealing' the plaster with PVA. What you
> should do is apply what those in the trade would call a "piss" coat. I
> assume it is so called because it is as runny as treacle? :-)
>
> For your first coat on fresh plaster, mix your emulsion 50/50 with
> water. It will flick and fling everywhere but will take the suction out
> of the plaster.
>
> Some say the second coat should be 75/25 paint/water followed by the
> final 100% paint coat. I've read the same instructions, but not done it
> myself.
>
> Personally (and believe me I've decorated shitloads of m2 of fresh
> plaster), one 50/50 paint/water piss coat followed by one (or depending
> on paint quality, maybe two) final coats of paint should do you.
>
> Hth
> Someone
or read
http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php?title=Paint
for a faster alternative to the piss coat.
NT