As for what happened to the plastering industry, you have to go back several decades before the 70s. I started in the business in the early 50s. Back then, interior plastering was done by installing gypsum based sheets of a product called ( rock lath ) on the interior frame walls. That was covered by a base coat of gypsum mixed with sand. This was referred to as the brown coat. After drying which was determined to a large degree by the weather conditions, a finish coat of soaked lime mixed with a hardener called gauging plaster was applied over the brown coat and trowled smooth. In a typical say 1000 to 1200 square foot single family home, the lathing and plastering process could involve several weeks of time. And in poor wether conditions it could even take longer because of the freezing temperatures. The sand for example could freeze in the pile, even at the supply yards. This all of coarse had a major effect on the building process as for meeting delivery deadlines. In the late 40s following the end of WW2 a builder by name of Levitt built an entire city of 17000 homes on long Island near the city of New York. All of those homes and all of the other buildings involved as well were drywalled. There was no plaster involved at all in the entire project. After Levitt completed the New York project, the built a duplicate project of 17000 homes in Bucks County Pa, where it so happened that i lived. So by roughly the mid to late 50s plastering the walls in the vast majority of all new homes being built was over. Some homes were being done however, and exterior stucco work was of coarse still being done. But it made the business much more competitive than it had been. To the point that it wasent a good trade to follow as it once was. I simply switched to the home building industry where i remained until i retired. However i still on occasion would do some plastering work. The one coat plaster over drywall has somewhat brought back plastering to some degree. The process is very similar to the old lime white coat process over the brown base coat. Similar, but yet different in the way it is done. And i suspect that is due to the differences in the material being used. We would use a very large mortar board of say 5 feet square in order to mix the soaked lime with a hardener called gauging plaster. We used a retarder in the mix in order to allow enough working time before the mixture took a set. We would build a scaffold in the entire room, and run a coat of the mixture on the entire ceiling and part way down the sidewalls. After completing the first coat we would follow up with a second skim coat over the same area. That coat was applied more carefully, with as few imperfections as possible as well as trowel welts. We then used a tool for finishing all the inside corners, called angles. And no it isnt the same type as the V shaped device used for drywall. Then we used a wide bristle brush dipped in water to smooth trowel a finish on it. We would hold the brush in front of the trowel as we walked across the scaffold in a straight line from one end to the other. After the trowling, the scaffold would be removed and placed in a different room. The next mix of the lime and gauging plaster would be used in the same way to do another ceiling/ side wall area as well as the lower portion of the walls in the previous room. The closets would be worked in as well. The entire closet would as a rule be white coated before any trowling took place. So this process of doing just a wall or just a ceiling of the room at a time isnt what the older version of plastering was like. The hawk and trowel are the same, but the way they are used is a bit different as well. We as an apprentice were required to practice at the mortar board taking the mortar from the hawk. And untill we could take the mortar from the front of the hawk we werent permitted to practice applying it onto a wall. In other words there was a certain way it was done, and thats the way you did it. Today i see some doing stucco work and holding the edge of the hawk against the wall, and then just pushing the mud from the hawk onto the wall. There are also devices called cheaters used in stucco work, where no hawk or trowel is used at all. I think its called gettin r done, which i guess is all that matters?
Wow, what a great post Mr Forrest. I worked on sites for years, and saw how physically demanding plastering is, but by the sounds of it, it was tougher in the 1950's. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experiences.
The main floor of my parent's house was done with rock-lath plaster and I was always impressed with that mirror finish. Reading how much work and skill it entailed, I can see why builders in the USA moved toward taped drywall, especially with the skill gap caused by the depression and WWII. The newest house I've ever seen with rock-lath plaster was built in 1969, so it has become sort of a lost art. I read in 1978 that 90% of new houses had plaster in 1959, but only 10% in 1969. Seems the huge number of buildings in the UK with plastered masonry walls, which have to be redone from time to time, have kept that skillset more alive over there. Here in New England, contractors and upscale builders still employ plastering crews to skim blueboard, but many volume builders just tape drywall. A few years back, a friend of mine was watching a new house go up across the street from him and this Mexican guy came out coated from head to toe in white dust. I know there are safe ways of using any of these systems, but no one bothered to train that guy; his employers were just looking for the lowest rate.
I think 30yrs ago plasterers were actually taught the trade as a whole, not just boarding and skimming nowadays plasterers just learn what they need to know at the time to make money, alot of the tradition has gone in the game, I was taught by a old plasterer who knew the trade inside out plus at that time I also attended college and gained NVQ3 which on paper means nothing but crossed with 20yrs experience of doing all aspects I have alot of respect for the guy who took me under his wing and shouted at me constantly lol I did internal and external absolutely loved it, travelled the whole uk and met some great people alon the way,7 yrs ago i quit and retrained as an engineer but i will never forget the many adventures I went on,if your thinking of doing this for a living you won't be dissapointed............ I watch a lot of this guys videos, and he is top notch reminds me of the guys I used to work with who had alot of passion in there work 👍
I to was taught by a top tradesman, all sand and cement two screeds on every wall leveled then filled in them days, Hessian scrim on the ceilings hard job also done cornice work and external render cornices, all part of the trade then
@stephendavies925 I'm that old I actually floated a ceiling, that was not fun 😐 has anyone put E.M.L on timber frame and tried floating it lol............. plasterboards have made things so much easier
In the 70s uk the wet trade where usually done on what was known as the lump .any guy could crack up and do a bit. Usually cash in hand and as the money was absolutely crap they would also be signing on the dole
As a decorator, I'd be more than happy to follow a spread like you, mate. Some of the guys i used to have to deal with were shocking. I gave up in the end and went back to site work and started spraying. The making good would bring you to tears sometimes though. Nice work mate 👍
What you need to consider, in the 70's there was a building strike and certain people including now celebrities were traveling the country threatening trades, so those trades may have had to get off site quick, or risk getting beat up. Also the plastering these days is crap, my last 3 jobs on houses that range from half a million to one million, the finish there was either old English or Spanish villa, and that's skimming on a flat board, and that's without the risk of getting beat up.
As an apprentice plasterer I was always taught that corner trowels were a no no. And never put on angles together always do opposite sides. Thanks to you I have tried it your way found the finish loads better. And able to do jobs a lot quicker. Thanks for the tips.
Love watching these video's kirk. I was a plasterer for 20 years. We never had SBR, hook beads. Or the accelerator and holding back chemical we would do different things back then to set it faster and hold it back. Wish i was a plasterer today. But we would dab those beads, especially if the corners weren't straight.
Lovely job Kirk. I'm soaking in a bath tub now after doing 7 ceilings over artex in three days and what am I? Still watching you plastering?? Cos it's a pleasure. I said to my wife that i did sich a good job on these ceilings and customer was happy which makes me happy too. But you are something else man. I still learn from you.
The bonus system came into play instead of a good decent pay rate the more work produced the more money paid. Plus clerk of works staff declined in numbers.
This video looked hard work but real life. It made me realise perhaps i am doing ok after all, living in a terraced house and possibly facing similar problems. The close up shots were spot on showing the true state of the walls as the coats go on. I agree with other comments though go easy on the music. So many you tubers tend to go down this route I feel it takes away the feel of the video being real and enjoyable to watch.
@@Onthetrowel it never hurts to try new things. It's handling the constructive criticism that is key and you have that nailed too... or is it plastered 😊
I've spent literally hour upon hour watching you plaster walls etc etc.... still find myself watching from start to finish.... just love watching the skill you have with the trowel...😄😃😀🇦🇺
I got a basic nvq level 2 in plastering when I was 19 and I did it briefly and ended up in something else now at 34 I wish I could get back into it love these videos mate keep it going!!
Price work came in and that's exactly it Mate! Freehand. The fellah who taught me for a bit Ritchie Milne was a Dab hand. He Served his time on Netherley. On block it was straight, on refurbs not so hot, but other plasterers did not have the trowel skills or the eye but still did not rule in. Hence internals like a dogs leg. Been off the tools for many years and can't help watching. Great vids.
It was the lazy spreads who ruled in floating using only a Darby, rather than properly using a metal feather edge first and then only "flattening" the floating with a Darby ready to scratching.
Ever tried a medi flex trowel? After first flatten? Replicates a good broken in carbon after a few uses. Handy if u gap a carbon. Needs a bit of work to get finishing but doesn't ripple as much as a superflex. Back up spare.
your 100 percent right about not having to flatten in after 1st coat as long as your coating is pretty neat,just use the wee bit time it takes the apprentice to mix up 2nd coat to flatten to worst bits
Glad I found time for one of your videos buddy. Haven't watched lately as I've been so busy. But I've missed watching this world class plastering. Some lovely close-ups in this as well!
@@dasgill4761 you got to be pissed up to keep going plastering day in day out surely nobody of sane mind would do it You become a slave to the mortgage then when it's paid you're bolloxed n time for the nursing home you got to be a pisshead to spread all ya life
Stellar job! Love how you moan about that tiny drop on the skirting board as mess 😂 I had a guy plaster my kitchen ceiling once and he covered the kitchen in plaster leaving the clean down to us which by the time we got to it, it had gone off fully so we had a proper job on just to get it all off every including the cooker and hood vent lol
My mate did all my plastering. Cheap as chips but.....the electrical sockets were nearly full of plaster, and as for keeping the windows clean....forget it. 😂😂 Nice to see how it should be done 😉
When I was plastering everyday with my mate (started off labouring and within 6 months was on the trowel) we did most things like yourself really , apart from 3 wets and a dry , we used to use a little brush to brush up corners of angles and a twitcher to finish it off on joined walls , I basically learned how to plaster when I installed archways and had to plaster the false wall we’d install for the sweeps to fit over aswell as the underneath and I got pretty good at plastering tbf , wouldn’t say I was fantastic but I could leave a decent finish and always left the job with customers satisfied , also turned my hand at rendering but only as a labourer and laying on for the lad who’s company it was , loved the rendering in the summer and plastering in the winter lol
I'm thinking the same thing mate I moved in to my flat just a few months ago it was built in the 1970's lovely flat but the walls are atrocious some better then others my bedroom looks like the surface of the moon lol not to mention the artex ceilings nightmare bloody cowboys I cant wait till its all flat, any way awsome videos love hearing all the tips and tricks of the trade and the banter to lol
Yes I’ve plastered for 50 years everything was Browning when I started worked for the same company 05 years day work used to room everything off with a feather edge after price work if you were good The, how you ended up doing it freehand that way you could earn more money
I as a concrete layer your abilitys are awsome im thinking of altering my future and what you have put up here is really a easy transition to anyone in the trade
I have the same problem all the time with older houses. Tradesmen where better in the old days my arse! Some of the work I go over is as rough as toast!
Here on the Isle of Wight, the plasterers we have working for us are absolutely shocking, the worst ive come across as a chippy with 33 years in the trade. There just isnt enough quality trades here so a very limited pool of good people.
The shoddy work you've straightened out was potentially laid on by someone who'd gone through a six month "fast track access to learning a trade" process (We used to call them "diluties"). Possibly doing their best during the tail end of the 60's building-boom, while chasing bonus work with minimal experience on the tools. Nice work as always Kirk
great video and info, im a retired plasterer , but i just wondered why no one seems to use a spot and stand these days, and uses it out of the bucket, which seems twice the effort, and takes longer than just sweeping it off the spot, just wondered thats all, as ive never used it out of a bucket unless its a patching job..regards
ok no prob just wondered, back in the day skimming was all mixed by hand by a plunger, and browning in a bath by shovel. them were the days!! not... i fkin hated it thank got for cordless power tools.. all the best...@@Onthetrowel
60s Late 70s and early 80s was council estate boom tones of social houseing went up everywhere tones of money to be made get in get out just as quick was the order of the day...not much have changed to be fair Decades of work left to be redone it will out of us lot on the trowle 🍻 Keep pushing fella best of luck Kirk
We shouldn’t forget plastering done in Lime materials from 1800’s on either! Any old house I’ve worked in/on with those old materials, astounded me just how flat and smooth they were with no silly polished finishes, that are a pig to paint! To me, don’t polish,…just smooth lads please!?
Would of give them a tight coat of bonding to build out in the morning, then skimmed if they were that bad, its all in the prep work can only do much with skim as it knly ment got a few mm per coat, been plastering 16 years 👍
Didn't have mixing drill s then &self adhesive scrim it was hessian scrim .to easy now for some .completely different now.hard work then. Been plastering since 1977.still going 63 now
I am no plasterer, but I can get by with taping and filling. So when it came to my kitchen ceiling needing a relatively small repair, I entrusted it to a retired plasterer, I am guessing he was late 60's. Long story short, he was as fit as a fiddle and he did an awful job, the recessed lights wouldn't sit flush and hollows everywhere. He would have been plastering from the 1980's I would have thought and I bet he ruined a few homes in his time. He did come back and just handed me my money back basically saying I was too fussy, but it was so bad I ended up ripping down the ceiling and taped and filled instead and took the opportunity to get some insulation up in the void as well.
I've lived in a couple of 70s built properties and the plastering was terrible especially the one I live in now it looks like it was plastered with a 8 inch emulsion brush 😂
Alright Kirk, might be a silly question but one that even as a decorator/plasterer I don’t know, do you scrim internal angles on re skies if there’s no cracks? I scrim all of them but don’t wanna be wasting time if it’s not really the done thing. Cheers mate
My brother,who was a spred back in the day (a good one too)allways use to say that youll find many as good but few better.That means when you become a good spred,you cant realy get any better.
My 1960s house also has pretty uneven original plaster in places. Which makes me wonder how do you know (with a trowel) if the plaster is going on completely flat as you work? Doesn't it just follow the shape of the underlying backing? And if you do detect hollows, how much can you build out with skim plaster?
The Trowel is flat so any hollows caus the corners of the trowel to dig in. Try to imagine dropping a beer mat into a big gin glass, which parts of the beer mat would be touching the glass
my house is only 20 years old - the walls are horrendous.... well done persimmon homes.... In some places (corners especially) I could literally plaster it nearer with my fingers!! No joke! If you were reskimming the room in this video in your own house, would you have opted to remove the skirting first, unlike this home owner? Taking them off is generally my preference, as otherwise they get shallower and shallower!!!
I used to panic like mad plastering and end up rushing making a mess as soon as i got that beat i was flying no mess no stressbis a very true statement
Basically the old trades were a bit rough but the so called 80% of trades now do a 2 or 3 month course. Some even a year. And still haven’t a clue! Councils contract all the work out now and most are absolute jokers. I’m getting a kitchen fitted at the minute. The plasterer was a bricky for a year but didn’t like it 😮 and a joiner did a friends tiling for the same contractors. Absolute abortion and needs all ripped off. I know the building game so at least I can pick any fault. But glad to see your a trade who takes pride in his work and knows his trade. Well done Kirk 👏👏👏👌
Keith just a quick question, I'm going to to put up insulated plasterboard in my mother's house, is there any difference between putting the boards up vertical or horizontal I'm going to Dab them on and take my time. The only problem is there are 9ft ceilings. What should I do. Sorry it wasn't a quick question after all 😂. Niall (Ireland)
Hey mate, aslong as you get them plumb and they are well stuck then it doesn't matter if vertical or horizontal. I find it easier vertical though. P.s. don't forget 2 mechanical fixtures in each board mate. If there's a fire the foam melts and the walls fall in 🔥😳👍
Kirk just a quick one, had a nightmare ceiling today, polystyrene coving down, sbrd the ceiling, then 2 coats of multi over a very shallow artex. First coat went on fine, but as soon as the speed skim touched it, it was congealing and pulling off, so troweled it flat, same with the second coat then it turned rapidly and i was chasing it. Wet and dry trowelling was tearing it. Nightmare especially on a 4 meter high staircase ceiling. Dodgy batch of plaster you think?
Nik I'm with you 100%. I'm trying new stuff to make my vids more interesting, I'm going to can the music and try some other stuff.... Just experimenting 😳
@@Onthetrowel yeah mate give everything a go, I just personally enjoy listening to you working and explaining as you go, that’s more than entertaining enough for me haha. But again mate, brilliant vid
Hi kirk. What the difference between board finish and multi finish. I only ever see multi finish being put on but saw that you'd used board finish. Cheers, and thanks for the video.
Sets a bit faster... that's pretty much it really. Its not quite as creamy. If someone is learning then they will have an easier time with multi. You can wet it and bring it back a little bit when it's starting to set
I had a 1960s house and all the trades were terrible apart from the electrics, the plaster used to fall of in chunks, I guess it didnt bond to the render properly. Today I live in a 2014 house and theres no plaster at all.
Try plastering her in spain kirk and getting a nice finish. Everything here is float and set. Sometimes you have to dab the walls out first to flatten them out.. and that's the inside the outside os mich worse
As for what happened to the plastering industry, you have to go back several decades before the 70s.
I started in the business in the early 50s.
Back then, interior plastering was done by installing gypsum based sheets of a product called ( rock lath ) on the interior frame walls.
That was covered by a base coat of gypsum mixed with sand.
This was referred to as the brown coat.
After drying which was determined to a large degree by the weather conditions, a finish coat of soaked lime mixed with a hardener called gauging plaster was applied over the brown coat and trowled smooth.
In a typical say 1000 to 1200 square foot single family home, the lathing and plastering process could involve several weeks of time.
And in poor wether conditions it could even take longer because of the freezing temperatures.
The sand for example could freeze in the pile, even at the supply yards.
This all of coarse had a major effect on the building process as for meeting delivery deadlines.
In the late 40s following the end of WW2 a builder by name of Levitt built an entire city of 17000 homes on long Island near the city of New York. All of those homes and all of the other buildings involved as well were drywalled. There was no plaster involved at all in the entire project.
After Levitt completed the New York project, the built a duplicate project of 17000 homes in Bucks County Pa, where it so happened that i lived.
So by roughly the mid to late 50s plastering the walls in the vast majority of all new homes being built was over.
Some homes were being done however, and exterior stucco work was of coarse still being done.
But it made the business much more competitive than it had been.
To the point that it wasent a good trade to follow as it once was.
I simply switched to the home building industry where i remained until i retired.
However i still on occasion would do some plastering work.
The one coat plaster over drywall has somewhat brought back plastering to some degree.
The process is very similar to the old lime white coat process over the brown base coat.
Similar, but yet different in the way it is done.
And i suspect that is due to the differences in the material being used.
We would use a very large mortar board of say 5 feet square in order to mix the soaked lime with a hardener called gauging plaster.
We used a retarder in the mix in order to allow enough working time before the mixture took a set.
We would build a scaffold in the entire room, and run a coat of the mixture on the entire ceiling and part way down the sidewalls.
After completing the first coat we would follow up with a second skim coat over the same area.
That coat was applied more carefully, with as few imperfections as possible as well as trowel welts.
We then used a tool for finishing all the inside corners, called angles.
And no it isnt the same type as the V shaped device used for drywall.
Then we used a wide bristle brush dipped in water to smooth trowel a finish on it.
We would hold the brush in front of the trowel as we walked across the scaffold in a straight line from one end to the other.
After the trowling, the scaffold would be removed and placed in a different room.
The next mix of the lime and gauging plaster would be used in the same way to do another ceiling/ side wall area as well as the lower portion of the walls in the previous room. The closets would be worked in as well.
The entire closet would as a rule be white coated before any trowling took place.
So this process of doing just a wall or just a ceiling of the room at a time isnt what the older version of plastering was like.
The hawk and trowel are the same, but the way they are used is a bit different as well.
We as an apprentice were required to practice at the mortar board taking the mortar from the hawk.
And untill we could take the mortar from the front of the hawk we werent permitted to practice applying it onto a wall.
In other words there was a certain way it was done, and thats the way you did it.
Today i see some doing stucco work and holding the edge of the hawk against the wall, and then just pushing the mud from the hawk onto the wall.
There are also devices called cheaters used in stucco work, where no hawk or trowel is used at all.
I think its called gettin r done, which i guess is all that matters?
Wow, what a great post Mr Forrest.
I worked on sites for years, and saw how physically demanding plastering is, but by the sounds of it, it was tougher in the 1950's.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experiences.
The main floor of my parent's house was done with rock-lath plaster and I was always impressed with that mirror finish. Reading how much work and skill it entailed, I can see why builders in the USA moved toward taped drywall, especially with the skill gap caused by the depression and WWII. The newest house I've ever seen with rock-lath plaster was built in 1969, so it has become sort of a lost art. I read in 1978 that 90% of new houses had plaster in 1959, but only 10% in 1969. Seems the huge number of buildings in the UK with plastered masonry walls, which have to be redone from time to time, have kept that skillset more alive over there. Here in New England, contractors and upscale builders still employ plastering crews to skim blueboard, but many volume builders just tape drywall. A few years back, a friend of mine was watching a new house go up across the street from him and this Mexican guy came out coated from head to toe in white dust. I know there are safe ways of using any of these systems, but no one bothered to train that guy; his employers were just looking for the lowest rate.
I think 30yrs ago plasterers were actually taught the trade as a whole, not just boarding and skimming nowadays plasterers just learn what they need to know at the time to make money, alot of the tradition has gone in the game, I was taught by a old plasterer who knew the trade inside out plus at that time I also attended college and gained NVQ3 which on paper means nothing but crossed with 20yrs experience of doing all aspects I have alot of respect for the guy who took me under his wing and shouted at me constantly lol I did internal and external absolutely loved it, travelled the whole uk and met some great people alon the way,7 yrs ago i quit and retrained as an engineer but i will never forget the many adventures I went on,if your thinking of doing this for a living you won't be dissapointed............ I watch a lot of this guys videos, and he is top notch reminds me of the guys I used to work with who had alot of passion in there work 👍
I to was taught by a top tradesman, all sand and cement two screeds on every wall leveled then filled in them days, Hessian scrim on the ceilings hard job also done cornice work and external render cornices, all part of the trade then
He sure is i am in ireland plastering since 88 i learnt the sams inside and out but i use cornor tool but he is class
@@davidmullett1152 Yes remember them well used to love working off the timber beads
Same here been doing this since 1980 learned from old school lads & Kirk is good keep it up kidda
@stephendavies925 I'm that old I actually floated a ceiling, that was not fun 😐 has anyone put E.M.L on timber frame and tried floating it lol............. plasterboards have made things so much easier
In the 70s uk the wet trade where usually done on what was known as the lump .any guy could crack up and do a bit. Usually cash in hand and as the money was absolutely crap they would also be signing on the dole
As an electrician, the fact that you cut around the back boxes definitely secures your position as top plasterer. Great job mate.
As a decorator, I'd be more than happy to follow a spread like you, mate. Some of the guys i used to have to deal with were shocking. I gave up in the end and went back to site work and started spraying. The making good would bring you to tears sometimes though. Nice work mate 👍
Well another amazing job..your skill level with a trowel is incredible..always a pleasure to watch a master at work..!! 🙌
Cheers Alistair my mate
What you need to consider, in the 70's there was a building strike and certain people including now celebrities were traveling the country threatening trades, so those trades may have had to get off site quick, or risk getting beat up.
Also the plastering these days is crap, my last 3 jobs on houses that range from half a million to one million, the finish there was either old English or Spanish villa, and that's skimming on a flat board, and that's without the risk of getting beat up.
Celebs beating up plasterers?
I think most of them old plasterers were drunk Kirk 🤣🤣
As an apprentice plasterer I was always taught that corner trowels were a no no. And never put on angles together always do opposite sides. Thanks to you I have tried it your way found the finish loads better. And able to do jobs a lot quicker. Thanks for the tips.
Your a true artist.
I cannot believe how clean you work.
Thank you
The way you put that gear on them walls, is sheer poetry in motion Kirk!
Look at you getting all fancy with the editing 😂 another good vid mate. Keep the content coming! I need something to watch between trowels and sets👍🏼
They all went self employed , as the builders did not want to pay the selective employment taxes and the ending of apprentices . 🤔
Government doesn't create, it only destroys.
Love watching these video's kirk. I was a plasterer for 20 years. We never had SBR, hook beads. Or the accelerator and holding back chemical we would do different things back then to set it faster and hold it back. Wish i was a plasterer today. But we would dab those beads, especially if the corners weren't straight.
Lovely job Kirk. I'm soaking in a bath tub now after doing 7 ceilings over artex in three days and what am I? Still watching you plastering?? Cos it's a pleasure. I said to my wife that i did sich a good job on these ceilings and customer was happy which makes me happy too. But you are something else man. I still learn from you.
The bonus system came into play instead of a good decent pay rate the more work produced the more money paid. Plus clerk of works staff declined in numbers.
This video looked hard work but real life. It made me realise perhaps i am doing ok after all, living in a terraced house and possibly facing similar problems. The close up shots were spot on showing the true state of the walls as the coats go on. I agree with other comments though go easy on the music. So many you tubers tend to go down this route I feel it takes away the feel of the video being real and enjoyable to watch.
Appreciate your honesty, watching it back, to much music kills it.
I'm just trying some new stuff to try and make the content more enjoyable
@@Onthetrowel it never hurts to try new things. It's handling the constructive criticism that is key and you have that nailed too... or is it plastered 😊
@@Onthetrowel mate your carector and skill is all you need mate trust us we like your vids
@@Onthetrowelit's already brilliant content Kirk. Don't change and keep em coming
I've spent literally hour upon hour watching you plaster walls etc etc.... still find myself watching from start to finish.... just love watching the skill you have with the trowel...😄😃😀🇦🇺
I got a basic nvq level 2 in plastering when I was 19 and I did it briefly and ended up in something else now at 34 I wish I could get back into it love these videos mate keep it going!!
As regards stopping - I was taught - "You're governed by the thistle, not the whistle " - good work mate :)
I'm stealing that line 😂
Price work came in and that's exactly it Mate! Freehand. The fellah who taught me for a bit Ritchie Milne was a Dab hand. He Served his time on Netherley. On block it was straight, on refurbs not so hot, but other plasterers did not have the trowel skills or the eye but still did not rule in. Hence internals like a dogs leg. Been off the tools for many years and can't help watching. Great vids.
It was the lazy spreads who ruled in floating using only a Darby, rather than properly using a metal feather edge first and then only "flattening" the floating with a Darby ready to scratching.
Ever tried a medi flex trowel? After first flatten? Replicates a good broken in carbon after a few uses. Handy if u gap a carbon. Needs a bit of work to get finishing but doesn't ripple as much as a superflex. Back up spare.
Thanks Kirk the video was great similar build house to mine and definitely realised we’re I was going wrong thanks to you’re video! Keep them coming👌🍻
your 100 percent right about not having to flatten in after 1st coat as long as your coating is pretty neat,just use the wee bit time it takes the apprentice to mix up 2nd coat to flatten to worst bits
Glad I found time for one of your videos buddy. Haven't watched lately as I've been so busy. But I've missed watching this world class plastering. Some lovely close-ups in this as well!
Basically, in the 70s, all tradesmen were pissed up
have you met a spread in the 2020?
Really?
I still am😂
@@dasgill4761 you got to be pissed up to keep going plastering day in day out surely nobody of sane mind would do it
You become a slave to the mortgage then when it's paid you're bolloxed n time for the nursing home you got to be a pisshead to spread all ya life
Bollocks
Stellar job! Love how you moan about that tiny drop on the skirting board as mess 😂 I had a guy plaster my kitchen ceiling once and he covered the kitchen in plaster leaving the clean down to us which by the time we got to it, it had gone off fully so we had a proper job on just to get it all off every including the cooker and hood vent lol
My mate did all my plastering. Cheap as chips but.....the electrical sockets were nearly full of plaster, and as for keeping the windows clean....forget it. 😂😂
Nice to see how it should be done 😉
When I was plastering everyday with my mate (started off labouring and within 6 months was on the trowel) we did most things like yourself really , apart from 3 wets and a dry , we used to use a little brush to brush up corners of angles and a twitcher to finish it off on joined walls , I basically learned how to plaster when I installed archways and had to plaster the false wall we’d install for the sweeps to fit over aswell as the underneath and I got pretty good at plastering tbf , wouldn’t say I was fantastic but I could leave a decent finish and always left the job with customers satisfied , also turned my hand at rendering but only as a labourer and laying on for the lad who’s company it was , loved the rendering in the summer and plastering in the winter lol
I'm thinking the same thing mate I moved in to my flat just a few months ago it was built in the 1970's lovely flat but the walls are atrocious some better then others my bedroom looks like the surface of the moon lol not to mention the artex ceilings nightmare bloody cowboys I cant wait till its all flat, any way awsome videos love hearing all the tips and tricks of the trade and the banter to lol
Yes I’ve plastered for 50 years everything was Browning when I started worked for the same company 05 years day work used to room everything off with a feather edge after price work if you were good The, how you ended up doing it freehand that way you could earn more money
They don’t make ‘em like they used to, I’ve heard it so often and I say thank god.
Another great video, Kirk. Thank you 😊👍
I as a concrete layer your abilitys are awsome im thinking of altering my future and what you have put up here is really a easy transition to anyone in the trade
I have the same problem all the time with older houses. Tradesmen where better in the old days my arse! Some of the work I go over is as rough as toast!
Here on the Isle of Wight, the plasterers we have working for us are absolutely shocking, the worst ive come across as a chippy with 33 years in the trade. There just isnt enough quality trades here so a very limited pool of good people.
One of the neatest plasterer I’ve ever seen. Have worked on countless sites
Love the revamped format. I’m watching On the Trowel.. let’s go!😊
That room looked hard work mate….It looks fantastic now as always 👏👏👏
Thanks 👍
Quality plastering , learned loads of tips and great personality 👏
Another great video, thank you for sharing your knowledge and skills.
The shoddy work you've straightened out was potentially laid on by someone who'd gone through a six month "fast track access to learning a trade" process (We used to call them "diluties"). Possibly doing their best during the tail end of the 60's building-boom, while chasing bonus work with minimal experience on the tools.
Nice work as always Kirk
great video and info, im a retired plasterer , but i just wondered why no one seems to use a spot and stand these days, and uses it out of the bucket, which seems twice the effort, and takes longer than just sweeping it off the spot, just wondered thats all, as ive never used it out of a bucket unless its a patching job..regards
I've let my apprentice become lazy... from this day forward he will be tipping buckets, cleaning spots and making am extra trip to the van 👌
ok no prob just wondered, back in the day skimming was all mixed by hand by a plunger, and browning in a bath by shovel. them were the days!! not... i fkin hated it thank got for cordless power tools.. all the best...@@Onthetrowel
Watching a Mr Johnstone video makes me feel like the luckiest apprentice in the World. Thank you Sir.
Can’t beat the magic noise Kirk 👍👍👍👊🏻
60s Late 70s and early 80s was council estate boom tones of social houseing went up everywhere tones of money to be made get in get out just as quick was the order of the day...not much have changed to be fair
Decades of work left to be redone it will out of us lot on the trowle 🍻
Keep pushing fella best of luck Kirk
I have worked on modern houses as a chippy ,council houses were better quality than modern new build
We shouldn’t forget plastering done in Lime materials from 1800’s on either! Any old house I’ve worked in/on with those old materials, astounded me just how flat and smooth they were with no silly polished finishes, that are a pig to paint! To me, don’t polish,…just smooth lads please!?
60's and 70's house's are pure danger for the reskim....the paint they used on new builds doesn't like thistle finish at all... feel your pain
Also, with the music, you can turn it down individually without turning down the sound on the video. What editor are you using? Sam
No time to sit around.. ive always said "governed by the thistle not the whistle" 😂
Would of give them a tight coat of bonding to build out in the morning, then skimmed if they were that bad, its all in the prep work can only do much with skim as it knly ment got a few mm per coat, been plastering 16 years 👍
Nice work those walls you dont realise when you go price up but can catch you out on the day but true professional gets over it nice 1 lads
Didn't have mixing drill s then &self adhesive scrim it was hessian scrim .to easy now for some .completely different now.hard work then. Been plastering since 1977.still going 63 now
I am no plasterer, but I can get by with taping and filling. So when it came to my kitchen ceiling needing a relatively small repair, I entrusted it to a retired plasterer, I am guessing he was late 60's.
Long story short, he was as fit as a fiddle and he did an awful job, the recessed lights wouldn't sit flush and hollows everywhere. He would have been plastering from the 1980's I would have thought and I bet he ruined a few homes in his time.
He did come back and just handed me my money back basically saying I was too fussy, but it was so bad I ended up ripping down the ceiling and taped and filled instead and took the opportunity to get some insulation up in the void as well.
in finishing concrete we use water to get the fat up when is going hard seems we have alot in common
I've lived in a couple of 70s built properties and the plastering was terrible especially the one I live in now it looks like it was plastered with a 8 inch emulsion brush 😂
Alright Kirk, might be a silly question but one that even as a decorator/plasterer I don’t know, do you scrim internal angles on re skies if there’s no cracks? I scrim all of them but don’t wanna be wasting time if it’s not really the done thing. Cheers mate
Not necessary
I like you kirk, you work exactly the same as I do . Good man 👍🏻👍🏻
My brother,who was a spred back in the day (a good one too)allways use to say that youll find many as good but few better.That means when you become a good spred,you cant realy get any better.
60s aren't much better, tiny ceiling yesterday 6mm in places.
Door frame out by 20mm
Anything to do with the builders strike?
My 1960s house also has pretty uneven original plaster in places. Which makes me wonder how do you know (with a trowel) if the plaster is going on completely flat as you work? Doesn't it just follow the shape of the underlying backing? And if you do detect hollows, how much can you build out with skim plaster?
The Trowel is flat so any hollows caus the corners of the trowel to dig in.
Try to imagine dropping a beer mat into a big gin glass, which parts of the beer mat would be touching the glass
Your work is immaculate!
my house is only 20 years old - the walls are horrendous.... well done persimmon homes.... In some places (corners especially) I could literally plaster it nearer with my fingers!! No joke!
If you were reskimming the room in this video in your own house, would you have opted to remove the skirting first, unlike this home owner? Taking them off is generally my preference, as otherwise they get shallower and shallower!!!
I used to panic like mad plastering and end up rushing making a mess as soon as i got that beat i was flying no mess no stressbis a very true statement
great job,like the way your angles turn out thats a skill.
Basically the old trades were a bit rough but the so called 80% of trades now do a 2 or 3 month course. Some even a year. And still haven’t a clue! Councils contract all the work out now and most are absolute jokers. I’m getting a kitchen fitted at the minute. The plasterer was a bricky for a year but didn’t like it 😮 and a joiner did a friends tiling for the same contractors. Absolute abortion and needs all ripped off. I know the building game so at least I can pick any fault. But glad to see your a trade who takes pride in his work and knows his trade. Well done Kirk 👏👏👏👌
This is like watching poetry in motion !!
Keith just a quick question, I'm going to to put up insulated plasterboard in my mother's house, is there any difference between putting the boards up vertical or horizontal I'm going to Dab them on and take my time. The only problem is there are 9ft ceilings. What should I do. Sorry it wasn't a quick question after all 😂. Niall (Ireland)
Hey mate, aslong as you get them plumb and they are well stuck then it doesn't matter if vertical or horizontal.
I find it easier vertical though.
P.s. don't forget 2 mechanical fixtures in each board mate.
If there's a fire the foam melts and the walls fall in 🔥😳👍
Hi mate, is that a 14 or 16 inch MT your using? Looks like a great trowel
You good mate and fair play to not using a angle trowel but I love them
Enjoy watching you man! How much time from start to finish for this room? Will those walls be painted?
Quick one. When re skimming walls are you priming with SBR or is it better to use thistle bond
Always use sbr mate
Top notch effortless. Wouldn’t bother to much with the music.
Cheers mate, was just trying different things, watching it back I don't like the music, its to much
@@Onthetrowel
Better with ya talking nonsense 😆😆😆 jokes aside there too video,s buddy. 🤟
Kirk just a quick one, had a nightmare ceiling today, polystyrene coving down, sbrd the ceiling, then 2 coats of multi over a very shallow artex. First coat went on fine, but as soon as the speed skim touched it, it was congealing and pulling off, so troweled it flat, same with the second coat then it turned rapidly and i was chasing it. Wet and dry trowelling was tearing it. Nightmare especially on a 4 meter high staircase ceiling. Dodgy batch of plaster you think?
SBR still wet?
@@Onthetrowel no mate, bar a few bits in the corners, very odd
I've always done a light scrape .
Pva
Put a tight coat of multi over
Let that set .
Then skim as normal (same day)
Definitely prefer to 9verbaord tho
So how long would a skim take for that whole room? I have a sinilar sozed room i want doing, including the ceiling.
That took us 3.5 hours start to finish
No one taped up joints back in the day then most were only finished to wallpaper finish
Great vid mate, just personal preference but I prefer you talking as opposed to the music, but horses for courses!
Nik I'm with you 100%.
I'm trying new stuff to make my vids more interesting, I'm going to can the music and try some other stuff....
Just experimenting 😳
@@Onthetrowel yeah mate give everything a go, I just personally enjoy listening to you working and explaining as you go, that’s more than entertaining enough for me haha. But again mate, brilliant vid
Quality video Kirk 👏👏👏
Where do I get one of those steps ups 😂 great video.
Kirk you are good 💯
What a quality video. The editing is so good!
Hi kirk. What the difference between board finish and multi finish. I only ever see multi finish being put on but saw that you'd used board finish. Cheers, and thanks for the video.
Sets a bit faster... that's pretty much it really. Its not quite as creamy.
If someone is learning then they will have an easier time with multi.
You can wet it and bring it back a little bit when it's starting to set
@@Onthetrowel thankyou kirk. Great videos. 👍
magic!
Well done, Sir!
I scratch out those cracks to get the pva primer in it is a glue after all
Upping the energy on the intros. Like it.
I think there was to much music and it ruined it but I'm trying new stuff
Do you always use board finish for over skimming and not multifinish
Awesome as always 👏🏽
I had a 1960s house and all the trades were terrible apart from the electrics, the plaster used to fall of in chunks, I guess it didnt bond to the render properly. Today I live in a 2014 house and theres no plaster at all.
Some of these old walls
Are a streight as a Chikins foot
With a sock on it 🤪
Next level editing on this video. You leading new tricks or got yourself a editor? Either way it's awesome 👍
Try plastering her in spain kirk and getting a nice finish. Everything here is float and set. Sometimes you have to dab the walls out first to flatten them out.. and that's the inside the outside os mich worse
Do you have to use the beads every time?
Is that a 16x4 your using for skimming. Do u always use board finish instead of multi or carlite finish
14 x 4 an yes always use board finish mate
Hi kirk do you prime with neat sbr or water down 👍
another cracking job lads
whats the difference between green plaster bags and orange ones?
Green is board finish orange is multifinish.
You can actually use either on any background, board finish just sets faster
Thanks
Great videos
Where did you buy the toolbox from Kirk ?
No speed skim on that one why was that and no corner trowel o no sponge keep up the good work
Quick question: why did you put the stop bead against the wardrobe but not against other frames? Thanks a lot!
Other frames like around doors have architraves around them so the join is covered. Against the wardrobe there would be movement on the join
What's the song used in this video?