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Posted
4 minutes ago, markharro said:

I read on one of the paint company's websites 4 weeks but our plasterer said as soon as its dry?

As soon as it’s all one pale colour 

Couple of days 

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Posted
56 minutes ago, markharro said:

I read on one of the paint company's websites 4 weeks but our plasterer said as soon as it’s  dry?


I left ours for three weeks apart from one wall which I did after 4 days when it looked dry. I had nothing but trouble with that one wall with the second coat lifting the mist coat off. I had to sand the lifted bits back and even fill in a few places and use a Gardz product to seal it properly then paint it. Was a right pia. 

Posted
1 hour ago, Kelvin said:


I left ours for three weeks apart from one wall which I did after 4 days when it looked dry. I had nothing but trouble with that one wall with the second coat lifting the mist coat off. I had to sand the lifted bits back and even fill in a few places and use a Gardz product to seal it properly then paint it. Was a right pia. 

Did you use high opacity paint designed for application to new plaster?

 

I have skimmed and painted newly plastered walls and ceilings over the last few decades, and the only time I have had issues is when some bell-end working for me had watered-down the paint.

Posted
7 hours ago, Nickfromwales said:

Did you use high opacity paint designed for application to new plaster?

 

I have skimmed and painted newly plastered walls and ceilings over the last few decades, and the only time I have had issues is when some bell-end working for me had watered-down the paint.


I used specific paint for new plaster. Same paint I used everywhere else. It was just this wall I had a problem with and the only difference was I didn’t leave it as long to dry as everywhere else. It was also just the bottom 1.5m of the wall. Above this to the vaulted ceiling was fine. 

Posted
12 hours ago, Kelvin said:


I used specific paint for new plaster. Same paint I used everywhere else. It was just this wall I had a problem with and the only difference was I didn’t leave it as long to dry as everywhere else. It was also just the bottom 1.5m of the wall. Above this to the vaulted ceiling was fine. 

Leaving a desk fan on oscillate in the room on a low setting will help move the air about and aid drying.

Posted
On 21/06/2025 at 01:33, Nickfromwales said:

the only time I have had issues is when some bell-end working for me had watered-down the paint.

I thought the mist coat was supposed to be watered down, or have i misunderstood something?

Posted
11 minutes ago, Post and beam said:

I thought the mist coat was supposed to be watered down, or have i misunderstood something?

That's exactly how I have always done it generally use Dulux trade emulsion, and add 25% water, mix well and apply. That's the first coat and then full strength once dried. All our walls are done that way, mist coat and another coat, 4 years later still fine.

Posted
1 hour ago, Post and beam said:

I thought the mist coat was supposed to be watered down, or have i misunderstood something?

High opacity paint is specifically for new plaster. The only time you'll get issues is if the plasterer has polished the plaster to a shine, and then you would be better off doing a mist coat (watered down) but for the last 15+ years or more I have gone pot > roller > wall & ceilings without issue.

Posted

The plaster in our house is smooth like glass, shame to paint it really. Had a few small issues with the frog tape peeling the paint. Even after a mist coat. Probably down to me not leaving the ceilings long enough before wanting to paint the walls.

Posted
5 minutes ago, Post and beam said:

The plaster in our house is smooth like glass, shame to paint it really. Had a few small issues with the frog tape peeling the paint. Even after a mist coat. Probably down to me not leaving the ceilings long enough before wanting to paint the walls.

That's when nerves like mine don't match the rock-steady hands of a decorator. My mate paints straight lines and cuts-in like a machine.....so doesn't need to mask.

 

They say if you can piss you can paint, but there is a HUGE difference between applying paint, and actually decorating a house; my mates roller just doesn't leave a single bit of evidence when he's gliding it around the room. Defo a skill that few appreciate (or want to pay for) sadly.

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