I’ve plastered my ceiling over artex with multi finish and I’ve never done it before and by the time I finished the first coat it had gone off to quick before I could put on a second coat. Is it possible to still put on a final 2nd coat if so how and if I also muck up the final coat is it possible for a professional to do a 3rd final coat or will it be to much weight for the ceiling?
You need to apply a form of a pva substance first. What we use is Blue Grit, which is a branded name for plasterers grit. You use a paintbrush or roller to apply it to the artex after you have scrapped off any peaks to the artex. The drying time is still quicker than if on clean plasterboard, however you have more time with it. Also as you laying it on, if you get it as flat as possible with less lines then there isn't do much you have to go over and start chasing your tail.
You should have uni bonded the artex first. That would have slowed down the suction process. With plastering it is all about speed that comes with experience. If you unibond over what you have done let it tack up you can lay another coat on ceiling and you will get longer to get it flat.
I assumed you scraped the artex ceiling before you started, if so then you should have no issues or if the room you are working in is hot this will make it go off a lot faster which is a problem we have in hot weather
No you need to remove the pointed bits of the artex. Then plaster so you see no artex then use multi finish.oh don't forget to bond it after removing the snap bits
Did you apply 2-3 coats of PVA prior to skimming with multi finish? This process must not be missed out, as it gives you the sealed ceiling surface that you need to work with, ceilings are the hardest surfaces to plaster, if you are in doubt I would get a professional in. Steven George Cook
Artex always should be removed before plastering.
First the best way to take on a artex ceiling is plenty of pva and use a thistle bonding its much thicker let it go off preferablly 24hours then come back and put your finish coat on (multifinish). Also you couldnt put a third coat on its to much weight best way to do it is either strip the ceiling or overboard it with new plasterboard
Even one coat of skim over Artex can be too heavy. To be honest (sorry it's bad news) at this point your best bet is scraping it off and skimming over the boards. Obviously check there's no asbestos in it first.
The best way for skimming Artex is for it to actually cake off(first coat sets a little)before you apply the finshing coat...always rember to grit Artex as p.v.a is not as strong and if the Artex is flaking and in poor condition,then I would opt to plasterboard over the Artex fixing into the joist and having a brand new ceiling.
The best way for skimming Artex is for it to actually cake off(first coat sets a little)before you apply the finshing coat...always rember to grit Artex as p.v.a is not as strong and if the Artex is flaking and in poor condition,then I would opt to plasterboard over the Artex fixing into the joist and having a brand new ceiling.
It is possible depending how gone off the first coat went but any ceiling can be sorted by a pro
Hi as long as the surface is still flat, pva the ceiling and apply 2 coats of skin. It should be fine after that.
Overboard and reskim would be easier
Did you seal the artex with pva or blue grit? If you applied the first coat andgone off then paint pva or blue grit over and applied the second coat and yes if you make a error on the second coat it possible for a true professional to correct it after it dried.