Plastering question

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21 Jan 2008
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Cambridgeshire
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United Kingdom
Hi Can anyone help me? i yesterday made my first attempt at plastering and i didn't get the finish i was hoping for it is not horrendous but there are some areas that will need filling!! is it better yo just paint when it is fully dried, see the low spots and fill them, or shall i PVA and re-skim? there are some sizeable areas that are poor??

Any help would be much appreciated
 
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to be honest my opinion would be for the time its taken you to do it or to fill or to pva and re skin would have prob just got a plasterer in to do it... would have been finished now dried and painted, but only my opinion!
 
Hi,
I would let the plaster dry. Paint on one coat ( water down first coat 1 fifth, this helps stop paint peeling) look for any holes like you said and then fill them in and sand them off when the filler is dry. I would use "easy fill" its easy to use and easy to sand .
good luck
Scooty
 
The fact that the finish you got is not horrendous (which is what generally happens!) means that it’s probably worth you persevering with it. I take it you’ve studied the archive posts & other material so you are aware of techniques? The rest of it is down to experience & understanding what’s going on; plastering is one of the most difficult trades to master & almost verges on black art!

It’s perfectly feasible to re-skim the low areas but, for the inexperienced, blending in the join will be more difficult than the original plastering exercise so your probably better of using a DIY type filler. As scooty suggests, paint a mist coat & fill the areas that look bad but concentrate on bringing up the low areas rather that sanding the surrounding plaster back to match as it ends up a bit like ruffled velvet which will need a lot of emulsion coats to cover up.
 
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Hi,

I had the same thing on the first wall i plasted. I am a bit of a perfectionist as well and this made it worse. The light in the room also mad a difference as I had a window on the landing that made light shine sideway down the wall. The low points really stud out. I used a dry wall sanding sheet by Oakey on a on a poll and this was really easy to use compared to using a sand sheet with a block. You can pick them up from B&Q. Get the OAKEY pivot head as well. There were a few areas that I needed to re skim but the sanding worked a treat. I put PVA on and then painted. Give the plaster a good few days to dry naturally though
 

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