Patching and Plastering - Rendering

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View Full Version : Rendering


06-05-00, 12:40 PM
I have a small dormer in the roof of my extension which has just been built. It is made from exterior ply and to match my existing dormer it needs now to be rendered. I understand how to render it but I cannot find anywhere just how to get the same texture as the original. My house was built about 10 years ago. The texture seems to be almost like small polystyrene balls under the suface. It is painted white. Is this a special coating put over the cement render or is it created by some kind of special render mix ?

Thank you


06-05-00, 09:10 PM
BTW, you will receive more responses if U.S. term "stucco" is used instead of "render". I know..., but it's just the way it is.

This could have been done a number of ways: vermiculite in render (hand or spray), vermiculite in the paint (possibly cement paint), a propriety spray texture coating. Premixed versions of stucco or render with vermiculite are available, but I don't know the term used outside of the U.S. or the specification. Hazarding a guess try "TYROLEAN".

Since it's a small area it shouldn't be hard to duplicate. If it's rough but smooth in some areas, add vermiculite to thinned render and paint it on. If it has a sandy texture, possibly swirl marks, add more vermiculite to the render, then treat it for a sand finish with a float.

11-21-01, 07:00 PM
My kitchen cabinets have a sealer on them. I would like to clean them up because they are a little rough on the outside also, they weren't cleaned right the first time the sealer was put on. I've tried everything to clean them up like removing smoke and grease and etc.., but nothing seems to remove all the stain. I decided they probable needed re-sealing. How do I go about this?


11-27-01, 09:37 AM
I think I understand what your problem is, but are you trying to remove all of the old finish, re-stain and then refinish, or are you simply trying to clean them?

If you want to re-stain, then you must remove all of the old finish using a stripper, then a wood bleach to remove the last vestiges of your old stain. If you want to simply kill the stain before painting, then a stain killer like Kilz works well, although the fumes are horrendous. You might try Binz shellac based sealer, which works well on most stains without the bad smell.