Painting over fresh plaster

Author
Discussion

romeogolf

Original Poster:

2,096 posts

130 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
I had some artex skimmed a few weeks ago and the first few rooms I painted over using diluted emulsion/mist coat and had no issues.

I've got another two to do, but before I go and buy some more cheap paint to water down, I was wondering if anyone could advise if the remains of this primer would do the same job? The benefits are that it's thicker/less messy, and I already have half a tub of it...! Thanks!





https://www.diy.com/departments/dulux-3-in-1-white...

LennyM1984

819 posts

79 months

Wednesday
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I'm not an expert (but am in the same position). I believe the purpose of a watered down mist coat is to effectively suck the paint into the porous plaster in order to seal it and prepare it for a proper coat. I would guess that the primer you have pictured would just kind of sit on top of the plaster.

mart 63

2,181 posts

255 months

Wednesday
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That stuff is for DIYers, its just a ripoff. Just go to a trade store and buy contract matt, half the price.

Simpo Two

87,889 posts

276 months

Wednesday
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romeogolf said:
I had some artex skimmed a few weeks ago and the first few rooms I painted over using diluted emulsion/mist coat and had no issues.
Now that you've sealed the plaster I'd just go for a normal coat or two of the final emulsion (NB I'm not a decorator).

ro250

3,036 posts

68 months

Wednesday
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mart 63 said:
That stuff is for DIYers, its just a ripoff. Just go to a trade store and buy contract matt, half the price.
I did that and had absolute hell with chalky residues and textures showing through the 'topcoat'. Would never use contract matt again.

illmonkey

18,813 posts

209 months

Wednesday
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I used Dulux trade brilliant white for my skimmed ceilings. Initially do a mist coat, then continue painting normal coats with it.

Jewson's do a deal on 7.5L, works out cheaper then Dulux decorators centre.

kambites

68,743 posts

232 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
I've always just used a coat of 50/50 diluted emulsion. I'd be dubious of anything thinker, the whole point is to saturate the plaster with moisture.

I just buy the cheapest white matt emulsion I can find and it's always been fine.

Edited by kambites on Wednesday 26th February 18:33

Mr Pointy

12,144 posts

170 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
romeogolf said:
I had some artex skimmed a few weeks ago and the first few rooms I painted over using diluted emulsion/mist coat and had no issues.

I've got another two to do, but before I go and buy some more cheap paint to water down, I was wondering if anyone could advise if the remains of this primer would do the same job? The benefits are that it's thicker/less messy, and I already have half a tub of it...! Thanks!
For a mist coat thicker is the opposite of what you want as you need it really thin so it penetrates the plaster. If you want to use it up it's fine, but water it down as before.

Hoink

1,461 posts

169 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
When painting our extension, I used bare plaster paint. It went on well, gave a good coverage and still looks good after 2 years. The make I used was No Nonsense but I'm sure there will be other brands which do similar.

Murph7355

39,636 posts

267 months

Wednesday
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Keep mist coating.

Baldchap

8,811 posts

103 months

Thursday
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ro250 said:
mart 63 said:
That stuff is for DIYers, its just a ripoff. Just go to a trade store and buy contract matt, half the price.
I did that and had absolute hell with chalky residues and textures showing through the 'topcoat'. Would never use contract matt again.
Contract matt is a really good way of telling who shouldn't be decorating a house.

ThingsBehindTheSun

1,602 posts

42 months

Thursday
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Murph7355 said:
Keep mist coating.
This, years ago I had a kitchen plastered and couldn't be bothered due to the mess so just painted straight onto the new plaster. Big mistake, unknown to me the plaster sucked all the moisture out of the paint and left the paint like a skin on the surface.

As I was getting down the step ladder, I stumbled, put my hand against the wall and the paint stuck to me and came off in a big sheet. I ended up having to pull and scrape the whole lot off and start again.

Always mist coat now.

LennyM1984

819 posts

79 months

Thursday
quotequote all
Baldchap said:
Contract matt is a really good way of telling who shouldn't be decorating a house.
I always use contract matt for mist coating and/or laying down a base coat prior to filling/sanding. I don't see the point in spending a fortune on normal paint to then sand most of it off/or water it down. What's the issue with contract paint?

mart 63

2,181 posts

255 months

Baldchap said:
Contract matt is a really good way of telling who shouldn't be decorating a house.
Why is that, it's on fresh plaster.

Techno9000

132 posts

87 months

ThingsBehindTheSun said:
Murph7355 said:
Keep mist coating.
This, years ago I had a kitchen plastered and couldn't be bothered due to the mess so just painted straight onto the new plaster. Big mistake, unknown to me the plaster sucked all the moisture out of the paint and left the paint like a skin on the surface.

As I was getting down the step ladder, I stumbled, put my hand against the wall and the paint stuck to me and came off in a big sheet. I ended up having to pull and scrape the whole lot off and start again.

Always mist coat now.
Made the mistake of not mist coating some new plastered walls 25 years ago... removed a vinyl sticker recently and, where it was over a wall so painted, it took the paint off with it back to the bare plaster. Lesson taken....always mist coat new plaster.

Arrivalist

885 posts

10 months

illmonkey said:
I used Dulux trade brilliant white for my skimmed ceilings. Initially do a mist coat, then continue painting normal coats with it.
This is exactly what I do.

Glassman

23,439 posts

226 months

As mentioned by several: mist coat.


ooo000ooo

2,615 posts

205 months

Hoink said:
When painting our extension, I used bare plaster paint. It went on well, gave a good coverage and still looks good after 2 years. The make I used was No Nonsense but I'm sure there will be other brands which do similar.
I've used the no-nonsense stuff based on recommendation on here, it's good stuff and cheap. Also good for painting over heavily coloured walls when changing colour.
I think screwfix have rebranded it and a lot of their no-nonsense stuff recently.

wolfracesonic

7,853 posts

138 months

mart 63 said:
Baldchap said:
Contract matt is a really good way of telling who shouldn't be decorating a house.
Why is that, it's on fresh plaster.

I came across this earlier in the week, whilst looking up the differences between vinyl and contract matt, mist coats. TLDR: contract matt is cheap, chalky crap.

dhutch

15,571 posts

208 months

kambites said:
I've always just used a coat of 50/50 diluted emulsion. I'd be dubious of anything thinker, the whole point is to saturate the plaster with moisture.
This. The sloppy watery mess is part of the fun!