Tuesday, February 23, 2010

We have some very hard drywall, in the early 1950s would they have plastered drywall before painting?

The drywall is on the wall in the kitchen between the kitchen and dining room. Also, it may be on the basement ceiling.





I am curious what was the norm for those days.We have some very hard drywall, in the early 1950s would they have plastered drywall before painting?
Dry wall was invented as a substitue for the older lathe and plaster walls. Plaster was used to disguise the crack between sheets. Now we use a kind of wide masking tape to cover the joins.We have some very hard drywall, in the early 1950s would they have plastered drywall before painting?
';Lath and plaster is a building process used mainly for interior walls. In the U.S. its use began to decline in the late 1950s as drywall began to replace it. The lath and plaster method remained dominant in South Florida until the early seventies.





The process begins with wood laths. These are narrow strips of wood nailed horizontally across the wall studs. Over this goes two coats of plaster put on wet: a rough, sandy coat (called a brown coat) and a smooth, finish coat. After the plaster is completely dry, the walls are ready to be painted. In the photo, ';lath seen from the back, brown coat oozing through,'; those curls of plaster are called ';keys'; and are important to keep the plaster on the lath. Insufficient ';keying'; and the plaster will fall off the lath. In Scotland horse-hair was used to help bind the plaster to the laths.





Eventually the wood laths were replaced with rock lath, which is a type of gypsum wall board available in sheets size 2 by 4 feet. The purpose of the four-foot length is so that the sheet of lath reaches exactly across three wall studs, which are spaced 16 inches apart on center (American building code standard measurements).





In addition to rock lath, there were various types of diamond mesh metal lath which is categorized according to weight, type of ribbing, and whether the lath is galvanized or not. Metal lathing was spaced across a 13.5 inch center, attached by tie wires using lathers' nippers. Sometimes the mesh was dimpled to be self-furring.





Lath and plaster has been replaced altogether with drywall (also a type of gypsum wall board, although a bit thicker), since no plaster is applied afterwards.





Although plastering as a building process has all but disappeared, there remain still a few skilled professionals (plasterers) who are employed mainly to do small jobs and patchwork in older buildings where drywall may not as easily match the existing finish.





A possible advantage of using lath is for ornamental or unusual shapes. For instance, building a room with rounded corners would be difficult if drywall was used exclusively.';





Ref: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lath_and_pl鈥?/a>

No comments:

Post a Comment