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paint peeling from plaster

7.4K views 17 replies 8 participants last post by  Lightningboy65  
#1 ·
I have a quote coming up in a few days. lady called me and said she has paint peeling in large areas from her house. All walls are plaster, house was flipped before she bought it. She also said they cannot keep curtain rods or towel racks to stay on the wall because the plaster just breaks away.

Is it possible to re paint or is the plaster done? I have used loxon primer before on trouble some plaster from my rep as it will help bind the plaster back together? I have painted a decent amount of plaster but never really repaired and or experienced with it.

I don't mind getting paid to do a job but would rather let her know what could be happening and or if there is a good chance it'll come back.
 
#5 ·
Do not assume that they did not put new plaster up. I did a house a while back that was flipped (I may never work for a flipper again...bad experience). They whole house was gutted, and new plaster. Sounds like in your case the paint might have been applied before the plaster properly cured. Sounds like a nightmare to fix.

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#4 ·
wipe it down with vinegar. That will harden it a bit. (newbies!) (and any paint rep worth a 5hit would have told you this already, just sayin.)
 
#9 ·
The other thing to consider is any paint that hasn't been peeled off yet will probably pop off once another coat is applied. The new coat will shrink as it cures and will more than likely pull any remaining right off the plaster. A large portion of it anyway. It really needs to come off to fix this properly.
 
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#10 ·
This whole thread reminded me that I had a conversation with a guy at my paint store. One of the local paint companies is having a GC insist that they paint plaster that is not dry. There is no heat in the building. The GC says he has to finish the job. The owner of the paint company is having the GC sign off on so he will take all responsibility. Even if the GC signed off I would have trouble doing the work. They are screwing the home owners. I would have to inform the home owners what the consequences will be for having the job done on time.

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#16 ·
I hate when the GC's pull this sort of thing. We had a local McDonald's franchisee who built 5 or 6 McD's restaurants and when it came time to paint the interiors, the GC would push the painters to the point that they were painting over WET joint compound. Yes, wet JC. I actually witnessed this in action and the mud literally would wrap around the roller!!!! Of course, you know who gets the blame.....
 
#11 ·
In addition to failure as a result of saponification, I’ve seen a lot of finish failure with traditional lime plaster originally finished with soft or even oil bound distemper, then painted over without removing the distemper. Latex over hide glue and chalk when coating over soft distemper typically results in progressive failure.