I have several isolated damp spots on plastered walls/ceilings - typically up to a foot in size - which are typically linked to historic water e.g. a slipped roof slate.
The problem is that once it has got damp, it just keeps sucking in water from the air, etc, and I cannot tell which may still have an underlying issue. I've got peeling paint, a bit of ceiling that has mildew, etc.
And I think even uf the original issue is fixed, a damp spot in plaster can spread?
Should I be ruthless and cut any such area back to bare brick rather than faff about with stain/damp blocking paint? Or will treating such areas with the right product mean they can dry out - provided there is no damp behind the plaster?
And then how do you fix an area of this sort of size? If you rip plaster off a brick wall that can be quite deep, presumably not really appropriate for home-fixing, and really needs plastering? Or is there something a DIY-er can do that's in-between a polyfilla bodge and proper plaster+skim coat?
The problem is that once it has got damp, it just keeps sucking in water from the air, etc, and I cannot tell which may still have an underlying issue. I've got peeling paint, a bit of ceiling that has mildew, etc.
And I think even uf the original issue is fixed, a damp spot in plaster can spread?
Should I be ruthless and cut any such area back to bare brick rather than faff about with stain/damp blocking paint? Or will treating such areas with the right product mean they can dry out - provided there is no damp behind the plaster?
And then how do you fix an area of this sort of size? If you rip plaster off a brick wall that can be quite deep, presumably not really appropriate for home-fixing, and really needs plastering? Or is there something a DIY-er can do that's in-between a polyfilla bodge and proper plaster+skim coat?

