state of walls after stripping and getting smooth again

Hi, we have just stripped the wallpaper off the walls in our living room, however a lot of the facing paper of the plasterboard walls have been ripped. To get them smooth again someone has suggested sanding them down, coating with a vinyl silk emulsion, sanding again, filling then lining to get them smooth again and someone else says sand them, line them then put a skim of plaster on them. What is the best idea? Would the plaster not come off the lining paper?

thanks

Reply to
julief1973
Loading thread data ...

Wow, whoever made those suggestions sure likes doing a lot of work. The sensible thing to do is to PVA the walls (this takes about 10 minutes per wall), then skim.

Reply to
Grunff

I agree, or you could PVA and use a woodchip paper for a quick cheap fix

Reply to
Space_Cowby

Definitely quick, definitely cheap with corresponding look. :-(

Not a big fan of Discovery Home and Leisure then ? :-)

Lawrence 'Sue Ellen' Bowen would have a fit !!

Pva and skim.

Reply to
keng

Sounds sensible.

This query caught my eye as I'm currently stripping off woodchip with a view to ending up with a smooth, emulsioned-plaster finish. Before starting, I'd assumed the walls would need skimming; however the underlying plaster is in extremely good nick (must have been covered by protective woodchip immediately after it had been applied). Only problem is that there is a layer of emulsion between the plaster and woodchip, which in many places has come away with the woodchip. Most of the emulsion is well stuck to the plaster and would paint over quite happily, but for the obvious "tide marks" at areas where the paint came off.

I really don't think it's feasible getting the remaining emulsion off, other than by sanding all the walls (urgh). Any suggestions? I'm thinking, maybe apply lining paper and then emulsion that (not ideal); alternatively is there a very dense emulsion I could use which would cover the surface imperfections?

David

Reply to
Lobster

LOL

Reply to
Space_Cowby

HomeOwnersHub website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.