Doing up our house!

Chase in the capping. Set some dots of plasterboard up and level them through with a long straight edge. Create some vertical screeds of these. When pulled in, slap the hardwall on and use these to keep it flat using a long feather edge. Just soak the walls with water. You’ll also need somebody to knock it up for you ideally so you can just get it on.

Going to be a steep learning curve
Thanks. That is actually really helpful. yes i have a skivvy lined up. Would you do yout screeds just in dab and dot or plasterboard screeds (9.5mm) which you then scrimtape before skimning?
yes we are aware it'sgoing to be very tough.we also have time and are ready to do one wall at a time, no matter how long it takes
 
You’d stand a better chance using sand & cement with render mesh bedded in. You’ll put yourself in a coffin trying to float and skim that with hardwall.
Thanks. we know it's going to be very hard. we have two smaller walls to do first which are flat and not that big. plan is to try these first and then move on to the bigger (bugger?!) wall. We also know that it won't be anyway near as good as a plasterer. We just can't afford it...
 
Thanks. That is actually really helpful. yes i have a skivvy lined up. Would you do yout screeds just in dab and dot or plasterboard screeds (9.5mm) which you then scrimtape before skimning?
yes we are aware it'sgoing to be very tough.we also have time and are ready to do one wall at a time, no matter how long it takes
It's not that you have to lay up that big wall and set it in a day time is not on your side trust me if you leave that the suction is going to be savage like Andy Essex says hard enough for a spread
 
Thanks. That is actually really helpful. yes i have a skivvy lined up. Would you do yout screeds just in dab and dot or plasterboard screeds (9.5mm) which you then scrimtape before skimning?
yes we are aware it'sgoing to be very tough.we also have time and are ready to do one wall at a time, no matter how long it takes

Dots about 2” square. Stick on with some PB addy. Either leave and scrim or pick them out and fill with hardwall.

It’s a pig of a job tbh. When I did my stair wall, I think I prob used atleast 8 bags plus skim and I was on my own. There’s a big learning curve to this and even if you practice on a couple of walls, you’ll regret starting it. I don’t particularly enjoy skimming a stairwell let alone floating one.
I was up a ladder cursing and my phone started to ring. Was my mate, so I let it ring out. Almost immediately rings me again and I left it. Then again and again and again. Really thought he was in trouble, so stopped the floating and rang him back and he picked up and said “Hello mate, just calling to see if you’re alright?” and no I wasn’t f**k**g alright! :cachetada:

If you have enough depth on the stringer, board it with insulated XP boards. Easier, quicker and warmer. It takes time to even get the technique of ruling it and getting the excess of the feather edge without dropping it everywhere and on a stairs it really isn’t fun.
 
Dots about 2” square. Stick on with some PB addy. Either leave and scrim or pick them out and fill with hardwall.

It’s a pig of a job tbh. When I did my stair wall, I think I prob used atleast 8 bags plus skim and I was on my own. There’s a big learning curve to this and even if you practice on a couple of walls, you’ll regret starting it. I don’t particularly enjoy skimming a stairwell let alone floating one.
I was up a ladder cursing and my phone started to ring. Was my mate, so I let it ring out. Almost immediately rings me again and I left it. Then again and again and again. Really thought he was in trouble, so stopped the floating and rang him back and he picked up and said “Hello mate, just calling to see if you’re alright?” and no I wasn’t f**k**g alright! :cachetada:

If you have enough depth on the stringer, board it with insulated XP boards. Easier, quicker and warmer. It takes time to even get the technique of ruling it and getting the excess of the feather edge without dropping it everywhere and on a stairs it really isn’t fun.
Poor you, I think my heart just broke reading all that ! :(
 
Dots about 2” square. Stick on with some PB addy. Either leave and scrim or pick them out and fill with hardwall.

It’s a pig of a job tbh. When I did my stair wall, I think I prob used atleast 8 bags plus skim and I was on my own. There’s a big learning curve to this and even if you practice on a couple of walls, you’ll regret starting it. I don’t particularly enjoy skimming a stairwell let alone floating one.
I was up a ladder cursing and my phone started to ring. Was my mate, so I let it ring out. Almost immediately rings me again and I left it. Then again and again and again. Really thought he was in trouble, so stopped the floating and rang him back and he picked up and said “Hello mate, just calling to see if you’re alright?” and no I wasn’t f**k**g alright! :cachetada:

If you have enough depth on the stringer, board it with insulated XP boards. Easier, quicker and warmer. It takes time to even get the technique of ruling it and getting the excess of the feather edge without dropping it everywhere and on a stairs it really isn’t fun.
Thanks for the advice. Really appreciate it. Definitely not looking forward to it! Probably will leave my right should somewhere in between ground and first floor. It’s going to be a pig of a job. We are doing the other 2 walls first because if I can’t do it or if it’s really too much, I’ll back out. Stringer is varying between 1.8cm and 2.6cm in width so definite no for insulation boarding. Have also high points on the brick walls which create 20- 30mm levelling differences and which would make boarding definitely over the stringer. We thought we were going to board to start with but we realised no chance when we finished cleaning and mortar repairs on the brick.
Will post an update, when finished (or not as the case may be…)
 
100% right, fitting a kitchen is way more of a DIY job than floating and setting a house. Jeez most plasterers couldn't do it to a decent standard.
You are probably right. That’s why we are doing the first two walls first and then the stairs wall. If it all goes to s***t then i have time to back out before i make the situation worse on the stairs.
…And we also have to do the kitchen, but also that one we had planned to do ourselves So no savings there either
 
Thanks for the advice. Really appreciate it. Definitely not looking forward to it! Probably will leave my right should somewhere in between ground and first floor. It’s going to be a pig of a job. We are doing the other 2 walls first because if I can’t do it or if it’s really too much, I’ll back out. Stringer is varying between 1.8cm and 2.6cm in width so definite no for insulation boarding. Have also high points on the brick walls which create 20- 30mm levelling differences and which would make boarding definitely over the stringer. We thought we were going to board to start with but we realised no chance when we finished cleaning and mortar repairs on the brick.
Will post an update, when finished (or not as the case may be…)
Grind the bricks back to 30mm all over
oh you know GIF by Andrew Foy
 
If you are going to go through with it try to get some body to mix the gear up for you you will need that extra pair of hands and screeds are your friend on this job but still got to be quick with it as your gunna need to skim it the same day
 
If you are going to go through with it try to get some body to mix the gear up for you you will need that extra pair of hands and screeds are your friend on this job but still got to be quick with it as your gunna need to skim it the same day
You're in la la land like them mate if you think a novice is going to drop screeds on rough brickwork, using Hardwall of all things.
 
You're in la la land like them mate if you think a novice is going to drop screeds on rough brickwork, using Hardwall of all things.
Not to mention skimming it the same day on a staircase with a variable background and bloody hardwall
If you were setting up a trade test, this would certainly separate the wheat from the chaff.
They say that necessity is the mother of invention, it's also the graveyard of ambitious.
 
Not to mention skimming it the same day on a staircase with a variable background and bloody hardwall
If you were setting up a trade test, this would certainly separate the wheat from the chaff.
They say that necessity is the mother of invention, it's also the graveyard of ambitious.
Are you building your own ship by any chance mate ?
 
Not to mention skimming it the same day on a staircase with a variable background and bloody hardwall
If you were setting up a trade test, this would certainly separate the wheat from the chaff.
They say that necessity is the mother of invention, it's also the graveyard of ambitious.
It's utter madness mate, be like me deciding to change the engine in my van.
 
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