Lathe And Plaster Ceiling
Lath and plaster is a building process used to finish mainly interior dividing walls and ceilings.
Lathe and plaster ceiling. If enough of them snap off the weight cannot be supported and the ceiling collapses. Lath and plaster generally used up to the mid 1950 s. Lath and plaster is more contour friendly than rigid drywall panels.
Plaster is brittle by nature and will crack at its weakest point under vibration. Sometimes it is only the horse hair strands in the mortar that is holding up the plasterwork. In canada and the united states the laths were generally sawn but in the united kingdom and its colonies riven or split hardwood laths of random lengths and sizes were often us.
Plasterboard widely used from the 1950 s onwards. Plaster and lath pro tips. The two of plaster surfaces commonly encountered.
Sizing up the ceiling. In older house lath and plaster ceilings may be countered this technique was largely replaced by plasterboard in the 1950 s. The technique derives from an earlier more primitive process called wattle and daub.
It consists of narrow strips of wood which are nailed horizontally across the wall studs or ceiling joists and then coated in plaster. When a ceiling required repair it is important to understand the differences between the two types and know which method was used when the ceiling was erected. I made every mistake in the book mistakes that cost me time frustration and blood.
Effectively this means that the plasterwork is hanging underneath the laths virtually unsupported. Lath and plaster and how it usually fails when a ceiling fails completely the lime mortar or plasterwork separates from the laths and drops down. However lath and plaster has its downsides.