How to engender venetian plaster?


Answers:    Materials:
Plaster (the manufacturer of the materials we're using offer 24 color combinations, but the plaster can also be color-matched)
4" steel trowel
100- and 400-grit sandpaper
Paint tray
Gloves
Drop cloths
Painter's tape

Steps:

1. The first step is to apply the foundation coat of plaster. The most important point you need to cram in lay down to do this at home is technique -- and that means holding the trowel at the correct angle. Here's how:
* First, nouns the trowel.

Tip: If the colors you choose are white or pastel, spread the plaster with a plastic wall scraper instead of a steel trowel. The steel can incentive gray streaks in the finish, and if there's any rust on the trowel, it could appear contained by the finish as well.

* Hold the trowel at a 15- to 30-degree angle and spread the plaster over the surface, using variable strokes and creating a thin branch. It's okay if the original wall surface peeks through -- we'll cover that within step two.

* Wipe the trowel often. Dried plaster could mix within with the drizzling plaster and make the surface bumpy.

2. Let the plaster dry for give or take a few four hours.

3. The next step is to apply a second coat of plaster. The technique this time is slightly different from applying the first coat:
* Hold the trowel at a 60- to 90-degree angle so it's almost flat against the wall.

* Make long and short strokes, overlapping them

* Fill contained by voids and recessed areas; making sure the original wall surface is covered completely.

* Smooth away any snake marks.

* Allow the plaster to dry for 24 hours previously finishing.

4. The third step, applying a topcoat, is optional. But if the nouns you've done gets like mad of traffic or a lot of moisture (such as an entryway, nearest and dearest room, bathroom or kitchen), you'll want to consider it. The topcoat makes the surface washable -- it also make the surface shinier. If you decide you don't want or requirement a topcoat, skip ahead to step four.
* You'll use your steel trowel (make sure there's no dried plaster on it). Hold it at a 15- to 30-degree angle, then verbs and spread the topcoat across the surface. It may darken the color of the plaster finish.

* Another option near the topcoat: you can mix in a metallic or pearlescent color. That will pass your Venetian plaster a more modern and contemporary look.

5. You need to tolerate the topcoat dry for 24 hours before moving on to step four: the finishing touch, burnishing. Burnishing give the Venetian plaster a marblelike polished appearance. And this is the step that takes so much time.
* Simply rub the surface contained by a circular motion, using 400-grit sandpaper.

* For an even more polished look, rub the surface with the flat side of a verbs steel trowel. It makes the surface more defined and marblelike.

6. And once you're finished burnishing, wipe the entire wall beside a slightly damp tablecloth to remove any plaster dust.