Wall Prep Help for Bathroom in Very old Farm Cottage
General decorating topics, questions and answers. find help, tips and advice on completing your decorating projects

Munky
Labourer
Labourer
Posts: 2
Joined: Mon Jun 12, 2017 10:30 am

Wall Prep Help for Bathroom in Very old Farm Cottage

by Munky » Mon Jun 12, 2017 12:02 pm

Hi All,

I am currently redecorating the bathroom in a very old farm cottage. The internal stud walls are relatively ok and I have filled the holes and sanded back (to original plaster in some cases where the walls were quite uneven and lumpy). I assume that it is ok to paint straight over the paint (and exposed plaster) on those walls? Now for the external, not so good walls. The original paint was peeling and coming off and there was some mould patches in the corner by the bath on the walls and ceiling. I have used sugar soap over the mouldy areas, stripped the pain where I could and filled the holes and rubbed down the best I could. I have put some mould resistant paint over the mould affected areas. The rest of the wall the paint has come straight off and exposed what appears to be concrete walls (or extremely rough plaster). Its an old farm building and I'm guessing the walls are very old. I want a nice smooth finish after painting (grey colour if that makes any difference), so what is best way to achieve this baring in mind that most of the wall is this concrete/rough plaster (where paint came off easy) and some of the wall is still covered in existing paint (where it is stuck on solid - mainly at top of wall) and also has patches in corners where I have painted mould resistant paint on?

I may add that it is a rented property and I am on a very limited budget so re-plastering/skimming is out of the question. I am ok with some hard graft and elbow grease so please can you guys (and girls) help with best solution to achieve nice smooth walls throughout? Thanks in advance

It is currently Fri Nov 15, 2024 4:04 pm