Evenin all'
Question for y'all. How do you go about skimming a surface which is painted but where the paint is nice and sound and well adhered to the wall but so damn smooth and glossy it's like glass?
I usually ask the customer to remove te paint prior to me skimming but I've been caught out on a couple of jobs now where I've failed to notice before quoting. Once I've quoted. that's it, I won't change it unless the error is down to the customer so I've ended up sanding back to provide a decent key before skimming. This costs me time.
Also, if there's an easy solution it means I can just go ahead and quote without asking the customer to put any effort in which will obviously be more attractive for the customer.
I'd considered mixing a handful of sand or bonding plaster to neat PVA but my worry here is that while the "rough" PVA layer may very well stop the skim from sliding all over the place when applied, there is every chance that the PVA could simple de-bond from the smooth painted surface.
Regards
Fred
Question for y'all. How do you go about skimming a surface which is painted but where the paint is nice and sound and well adhered to the wall but so damn smooth and glossy it's like glass?
I usually ask the customer to remove te paint prior to me skimming but I've been caught out on a couple of jobs now where I've failed to notice before quoting. Once I've quoted. that's it, I won't change it unless the error is down to the customer so I've ended up sanding back to provide a decent key before skimming. This costs me time.
Also, if there's an easy solution it means I can just go ahead and quote without asking the customer to put any effort in which will obviously be more attractive for the customer.
I'd considered mixing a handful of sand or bonding plaster to neat PVA but my worry here is that while the "rough" PVA layer may very well stop the skim from sliding all over the place when applied, there is every chance that the PVA could simple de-bond from the smooth painted surface.
Regards
Fred