Best Plastering Videos

Numerous attempts, numerous failures, mate. Continue sharing your friend's RWAF videos and be honest now. Is he the one who trained you, or did you just pick it up from his YouTube videos, you opportunistic key ring distributor?
 
Best Plastering Videos
 
Numerous attempts, numerous failures, mate. Continue sharing your friend's RWAF videos and be honest now. Is he the one who trained you, or did you just pick it up from his YouTube videos, you opportunistic key ring distributor?
RWAF…… rabbit welfare association & fund apparently. Are you sure you’re on the right forum? :estudioso:
 
Hillside vids were hilarious, but sadly deleted. Kirk Giodiarrhoeanio's vids were gold, especially the shoutout from across the pond to And don't forget his brother, Lou—those moments were pure comedy gold!

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As my old man has often said, there were plenty of clueless Muppets back then as well.
my grandad was a plasterer now up in that great building site in the sky,

ho told me one job left the tools on the job, all secure all locked up, came back monday morning trowels/handboards/snips etc etc, all put tidily to one side , but all there haversacks/wooden tool boxes all nicked, this was 1947, so toerags about in those days,
 
Did you old bastards wear a whistle and flute to plaster back then @hector
no stewie03, but all the older plasterers , and this would be i think 1974, all wore ties, and some wore jackets, at the end of each day they gave themselves a brush down , and off home, there was one plasterer who got captured on the first day of world war 2, and spent the entire war in a prison camp , and another plasterer who is long gone now, who fought in the korean war, and when he came home he never ate rice/rice pudding in a tin/anything to do with rice, used to say ,if you seen what them dirty fckers did in them paddy fields, another plasterer who when he had finished a wall would say , P for perfect, i still wear overalls to this day, tracksuit bottoms just look scruffy to me, feel like taking a baseball bat to people who wear them,
 
no stewie03, but all the older plasterers , and this would be i think 1974, all wore ties, and some wore jackets, at the end of each day they gave themselves a brush down , and off home, there was one plasterer who got captured on the first day of world war 2, and spent the entire war in a prison camp , and another plasterer who is long gone now, who fought in the korean war, and when he came home he never ate rice/rice pudding in a tin/anything to do with rice, used to say ,if you seen what them dirty fckers did in them paddy fields, another plasterer who when he had finished a wall would say , P for perfect, i still wear overalls to this day, tracksuit bottoms just look scruffy to me, feel like taking a baseball bat to people who wear them,
I wear jogging bottoms, I'll be keeping my eyes peeled for someone carrying a baseball bat and a handboard.
 
no stewie03, but all the older plasterers , and this would be i think 1974, all wore ties, and some wore jackets, at the end of each day they gave themselves a brush down , and off home, there was one plasterer who got captured on the first day of world war 2, and spent the entire war in a prison camp , and another plasterer who is long gone now, who fought in the korean war, and when he came home he never ate rice/rice pudding in a tin/anything to do with rice, used to say ,if you seen what them dirty fckers did in them paddy fields, another plasterer who when he had finished a wall would say , P for perfect, i still wear overalls to this day, tracksuit bottoms just look scruffy to me, feel like taking a baseball bat to people who wear them,
My great uncle John served in Burma and he wouldn't have anything even remotely connected to Japan in the house, he f**k**g hated them.
I don't know what he saw out there, but I'm sure it was the reason for his alcohol abuse.
 
no stewie03, but all the older plasterers , and this would be i think 1974, all wore ties, and some wore jackets, at the end of each day they gave themselves a brush down , and off home, there was one plasterer who got captured on the first day of world war 2, and spent the entire war in a prison camp , and another plasterer who is long gone now, who fought in the korean war, and when he came home he never ate rice/rice pudding in a tin/anything to do with rice, used to say ,if you seen what them dirty fckers did in them paddy fields, another plasterer who when he had finished a wall would say , P for perfect, i still wear overalls to this day, tracksuit bottoms just look scruffy to me, feel like taking a baseball bat to people who wear them,
On my first day at work I got sent home with a letter for my mother stating that I need to be properly dressed with a neck tie at all times. As the leading plasterer was going to turn me into a plasterer and a gentleman. If I wanted a lift home in Harrys car you need to be well dressed and clean. One of the plasterers did not wear a tie so he had to travel on the Bus.
At the finish of the 2nd world war if you stayed on as a reserve the Government gave £5 a month. The next thing was this lot all got called up to the Korean war.
 
no stewie03, but all the older plasterers , and this would be i think 1974, all wore ties, and some wore jackets, at the end of each day they gave themselves a brush down , and off home, there was one plasterer who got captured on the first day of world war 2, and spent the entire war in a prison camp , and another plasterer who is long gone now, who fought in the korean war, and when he came home he never ate rice/rice pudding in a tin/anything to do with rice, used to say ,if you seen what them dirty fckers did in them paddy fields, another plasterer who when he had finished a wall would say , P for perfect, i still wear overalls to this day, tracksuit bottoms just look scruffy to me, feel like taking a baseball bat to people who wear them,
I started in 1983 my tradesman who was in his 60's always wore a bunnet, tweed suit, checked shirt and a woollen tie, proper shoes as well. He looked like he was going for a walk in the country in the 1950's.
Once at work he would change into his work clothes, so a white bib 'n' brace, white jacket and desert boots and the obligatory bunnet.
Meanwhile I was dressed like an explosion in an army surplus store.
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