Top Tips for Rendering ( Making Window Sills With Sand Cement Render)
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- čas přidán 24. 08. 2024
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In this video, I'm going to show you how to make window sills using sand cement render and corner beads.
Making window sills can be very tricky (especially if you're building them from scratch). However, it is possible and in this video, we're going to show you the easiest way to do it.
We'll show you:
- How to fix external corner beads
- The best process for making window sills from scratch
- The fastest way to apply render
- The best materials to use for success
- A simple hack for working with sand cement render
This is what we'll show you in today's video. For more advice you could also watch these videos from our Plastering For Beginners channel:
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- How To Finish Render - • How To Finish Render |...
- Rendering For Beginners - • How To Render A Wall (...
- How To Plaster A Brick Wall With Cement - • Beginners Guide To Pla...
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For more advice, you could also visit our website at:
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plasteringforb...
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Thanks for watching. We'd love to hear from you so please leave a comment below and if you really liked this video then please like and subscribe!
Thanks again.
See you on the next one!
Cheers,
Blaine
I love reading these comments. I'm Canadian, a former teacher and now a plasterer in the UK!
Something that always sounds funny to my ear is the way you Brits use the word 'pal'. That's a bit old fashioned in North America, and often comes across as sarcastic, as in if someone messes you about in some way you say 'Thanks a lot, PAL!'
So, thanks for the video, PAL! 😄
in the north east of england 'marra' is used quite a bit which means the same as pal.
a marra was a coal miners assistant
cheers marra
Haha I loved this. That's a great comparison and I've heard "Marra" before but I never actually knew the origins. I do love the English language. Thanks for the heads up lads. Cheers pal 🤣🤣
A thing of beauty - great instruction and demo. Really inspiring. Thank you!
Thanks a lot mate...I really appreciate that!!
Never knew there was so much to it. Great to watch an expert at work and taking such pride in your work too. Excellent video and excellent job. Someone took a lump out of our bay window sill and I can't afford to get anyone to do it for me and it's a council house and they'll fix nothing (10 years without heating - they installed the system brand new and 6 months later it quit).
any tradesman who is good at his or her job, and passionate about it is always good to watch
Thanks for making the video
Thanks mate. I really appreciate that 👍
Thanks for the video! I now have a good start on my project. My sills are much thicker. Like 8 inches and before I tear them all down, I am trying to figure out how they created the "molds". House, and I believe the sills, were bult in 1963 here in ST Petersburg, Florida USA. I really appreciate you!
It is good to see some one who takes pride in their work, well done to you.
Thank you mate! I really appreciate that 👍
@@PlasteringForBeginners love your channel mate & watching your vids. Can tell your a top tradesman. I got a block wall about 2m high x 3m width been bare block for 15 years & I want to render it. I have very little experience just watching people on site & all your videos.
1 do I sbr wall before the scratch coat. What mix for scratch coat how long do I leave it before I put top coat on & do top mix need to be different ratio with waterproofer in. Any advice will be greatly appreciated thank you mate
@@PlasteringForBeginners Need your advice, i am a painter & decorator.
What would you recommend as an all round plastering trowel for filling in with undercoat plaster? For making good surfaces to paint.
Mate that's a top vid couldn't have come at a better time as I am wondering how to fix my cracked concrete window sills nice one
Thank you mate and not a kitchen!! Thanks for watching my friend 👍
What a massive improvement 👍Top tradesmen and great guy to explain the various processes needed for a quality job.
Thank you mate - I really appreciate that pal 👍
Beautiful work mate love the fact your so passionate in your craftsmanship
What a great video and explanation. I will try your system, however i will have to run a drip line along the bottom of the sill to prevent runs down the external paint work. Thanks for the idea 👍
Pure excellence in craftsmanship
Just started learning how to plaster out here in new york ...iv only come across your videos they are very helpful ...great work keep the viedos comming
Great to hear a viewer from the states! Thank you for watching. I really appreciate it and good luck with your plastering my friend!!
Pure artisan. Great work. Profession needs more like this.
Fantastic work
A work of art. Beautiful ! My window sills are looking a bit wonky underneath! Need this done to them.
Very nice explanation thanks Blaine. I'm far from a beginner and in the beginning started off working as a labourer for a multi-finish spread in London. Years later I gave up cement and chemical glues to specialise in historic lime and now slake and make my own lime putty mortars for old house and church repairs. For the record lime mortar in the eye's is very painful, especially the fine particle mixes used in skimming work and can affect people so differently, one labourer who got splash-back from a mixer was off work, lying down in a darkened room for 3 days until his eye was better. After a couple of hospital visits I now always wear glasses/goggles doing ceiling skims and don't take too many chances.
By slaking the fine 'kibbled' quicklime you double the amount of lime putty you produce and there is very little waste of mortar on a job because until it's slapped onto the wall and exposed to the air it won't start to set. I usually pre-mix my mortars several weeks or even months before a job because it makes it lovely and sticky.
At the moment I'm rendering a house front in a haired lime mortar and doing 3''x 1'' raised area's around 5 windows & 1 door which I will also be pargeting a bull-nosed, single line in the green render to highlight the opening.
Lime mortars uses no chemicals (other than the natural ones) and actually absorbs carbon dioxide from the environment giving a lime plastered room better acoustics and a slightly warmer feel than a cement one. Lime and cement will continue to harden up to 6 years after it's first set.
I have greatly enjoyed the interesting and friendly brother- (& sister)hood of the wet trade over the years and started mixing with a stick in a bucket (no whisks at that time in the 80's) worked on one or two multi-million £ projects in the UK with the 4 different conservation firms I worked for and enjoy the bond you get with somebody who also does the same work. All the best.
So sorry for the late reply but your story is fascinating. I'd love to be able to try using the old lime putty - I think it's an amazing skill so I have a huge amount of respect for you my friend! I'd love to give it a try one time. Hopefully our paths will cross.
Thank you for your comment and it's great hearing from a true craftsman like yourself. Well done. Thanks again. Blaine 👍
@@PlasteringForBeginners, I'm blushing at the compliments thanks Blaine. I simply got into the whole thing because the material works and has easily stood the test of time and I love old churches, I also take an hourly rate cut when doing them up because they were built for the public and I want to give something back.
Working in an old church built in a water meadow with no damp course and no waterproofer it was a fascinating place with Sgraffito mural work done in different coloured sand & cement renders in 1880 by Haywood Sumner, I cut away all the cement render a meter high around the inside of the building and re-rendered in lime mortar.
The oldest place I worked in was Torre Abbey, Devon which was 800 years old. down in the undercroft of the place, there was even a cell with a small rectangular hole where a hermit lived out his time. I found this place so cool and because I started early, worked late I would talk to the ghosts of the place.
In actual fact we found about 6 or 7 remains in an area near the lavabo (dish washing area) which was being prepared for the new lift shaft.
Around the entire complex there was a very expensive laser fence system installed to deter thieves. I talked with Basil the Kia's site manager and asked him if he seen anything strange. He said that of the 6 or so times that the silent alarm had been triggered it was always in the oldest part of the site where the old church was built.
There were 2 types of building plan for the place, the architects and the archaeologists, the architects did their drawings with rulers and cad software, the bone diggers did theirs freehand.
Before any area's were opened up for repair or replastering you had to take one of the 4 Museum of London bone diggers with you so he could OK you to start.
Down in the undercroft area I found a hidden Medieval circular stone staircase which it was decided they wouldn't uncover because of the costs. There were quite a few big (4 -5 feet thick) internal support walls and when repointing 2 of the wall tops I found the bottle stashes of the alcoholic monks who had lived and worked there.
The Abbey bottled and distributed brandy and other pricey spirits at the place.
Under the haired top-coat plaster, which pulled off the wall like a sheet, near the hidden staircase, carved into a stone support column plastered in 3 coat work lime, facing into a corner with no doors or windows I found a quatrefoil.
It looks like a 4 leaf clover and was an interesting find, but no idea what it was for.
In other old Devon properties I've found Daisy wheels carved into wooden passageway panels to ward off evil spirits.
Across the road from the site there was an old tythe barn where 300 Spanish Armada prisoners-of-war were kept prisoner before their transfer for trial or a bigger jail.
While you are still young, learn about the traditional stuff and do it yourself. Go on a SPAB course as I once did, they are all over the country and in terms of contacts are value for money.
Lastly since getting into the business I've never been out of work. This has taken many years of living in one spot, I don't advertise, my work is word of mouth.
Best of luck.
He’s good this guy. Just watched his plastering for beginners vids, might have a go myself
Such patience! A rendering Zen Meister!
Superb Video..The attention to detail and the patience is awesone 😮👌👌
stunning work
You make it look so easy if I lived on ground floor I’d have a go but ladders are a No No great job 👏 👏
Good stuff - I need to practice for sure.
Hi, thank you for this video, this is very helpful what ratio are you using for sand and cement? Thanks
That's great. Thank you.
Nice job, well done.
Brilliant thanks.
would like to see these 4 years on.
👍🏽
Nice job lot of respect to you brother
look like you've done that once or twice! Beautiful job! great vid!
Haha just a few times pal 😂
Thank you for sharing. Nice video.
Beautiful work , the English do it well and the standards so high ,we do it very similar here in Australia , everything’s ruled , plumb and flat with a nice sponge finish .
Thank you mate and yes I agree. I worked in Oz and the firm I worked with were brilliant!! Great standard of work. Thank you for watching and it was great hearing from you!!
Top job!! Thanks for sharing your knowledge and tips!!
No worries, thanks for watching!
Job well done, thanks for the great demonstration
Thank you for watching!
Nice job with the sills. I cut sills off when i do renovations, its much quicker. Use a little wet tile cutter then jackhammer it off. Takes me about 2hours to cut off all the sills of a house.
That works too my friend! Good way to do it 👍
Great job Blaine, looks sharp with the plastic instead of metal bead
Thanks mate! The plastic beads are a lot shorter 👍
Plastering For Beginners yeah have a sharper edge too. Looks the business
Cheers mate!
Fantastic video. Nicely paced.
Thank you mate, I really appreciate that!!
Liked the cameo of the chip pie. 🤣
Very nice smooth finish indeed but what about the rain lip under the sill to avoid the rain going back into the house?
The whole sill is angles including the underside. The water will just run off 👍
great video, what was the original ratio for the render mix?
Thanks.
Looks good
Like the care you take great vid👍
Thank you!!
brilliantly
Thank you 😊
👍 we'll done mate nice work
Hey Mate, Fantastic job, watch all your videos, great craftsmanship.
What was your render ratio for first coat? I believe the top coat was 5:1.
Also I have an existing cill, that was painted, the paints peeling off, needs a clean up, would I need to use new beads?
Love the video it helps a little.
Glad to hear it!
I have uPVC windows so would need to butt up against the plastic at ~1 inch height. What's the bet way of waterproofing this gap, I'm just worried about water ingress and freeze/thaw. Lots of good quality caulking I guess?
That is the first time I have seen someone renovate some grotty window cills. Those were in pretty good condition though - wonder how you would approach cills on older houses that have started to disintegrate - I've seen a lot of local terraced houses about 110 years old in my area where the ornate Victorian cills have started to flake off. They seem to be made up of some kind of aggregrate compound and were probably pre-cast. Could you tell us what mix you used, it looked pretty thick cement/sand mix - did you have a plasticizer in the mix ? Great to watch and you are a perfectionist !
Thanks mate! Yeah these were in good Knick to be fair but the process is the same regardless. The scratch was 4:1 and the to was 5:1. FEB Rendermix was in both and a bit of lime for the top also. Lovely mix 👍
You kept your cool with that noise haha brilliant video fella
Haha tell me about it pal!!
great job m8 im a painter by trade and that job is a class that u have done big thumbs up from me
Thanks mate! I really appreciate that 👍
@@PlasteringForBeginners i m8 i live in whitley bay toon army haha but the stonework gets fucked to bits of the sea air sand and cement and lime plenty pva etc
Lovely work mate
Thank you mate. I really appreciate that 👍
Excellent presentation, good luck with your channel bro
Another great video mate, well done keep it up buddy.
Cheers pal!!
You wouldn't belive how much your vids have helped me, keep it up muka.
Thank you mate. I'm glad you're finding them useful. Cheers 👍
great video, whats the ratio? Is the sand, plastering sand or building sand or sharp sand?
Thank you.
The top coat is 5:1 ( 5 Plastering sand: 1 cement). I also added FEB Rendamix
Amazing job!
Cheers mate!!
Super job,, great idea using beads,, 👍👍
Thank you mate. I really appreciate that 👍
How do you manage rainwater drip grooves on the bottom of sills
Very therapeutic! More calming music please! :0)
Cheers pal 👍
How has it faired after a winter with the ice? I would have thought the plastic would have given water inroads to the cement? A window sill is horizontal after all. Also the 5:1 ratio I would have thought would make the cement permiable.
I think it's still going well my friend...I've not heard anything so I assume all is well. I appreciate your concern but I think it's going strong...I'll let you know otherwise 😂
That was skillful
Cheers pal!
These captions crack me up lol. Good job lad
Haha thank you matey 👍
Your a real craftsman and a pleasure to watch.
One question please do you ever put any sbr in the reader mix?
Thank you mate - I really appreciate that. I do for the scratch, I find it makes the render stickier, but I don't like it in the top coat. I just don't like to finish with it. Thanks again for your kind words, great hearing from you 👍
As a plasterer for over 40 years I’ve never seen someone piss around so much. I would have had about ten of these done in the time you’ve played with that
Fair enough!
If you got 40 years experience why you watching plastering for beginners.maybe you should have your own CZcams channel.
@@jimralph8066 because I like the channel and we are all entitled to an opinion. In my opinion sometimes its better to just get the plaster on the wall and theres no use playing around with it when you are going to rule it off or go over it again. I think that the fella is a very tidy and conscious worker and I admire him for that and also for having a go and making a You Tube channel. As I said we can have an opinion and I was wise enough to get out of having to make a living from the plastering game when I was 34.
Awesome job R kid.....great video...just subbed...are you a Manc by any chance ?
Lovely job and so worth doing. Underneath my window sils is stone moulding which is in very bad shape and needs redefining. I was going to use Toupret which is a filler, do you think this will work? Do you have a video doing this kind of job as it's not that straight forward?
Luvly
I feel like you’re working in Spain or something.. rendered wall,green window frame,blue skies 🤙
Can you do this on mullions?
Love the videos. Am using your video to plaster my full house. But you may be able to help me with something I need to block point some windows. I got a crushed stone and yellow sand white cement and lime. What is the best ratio to mix. Keep the video coming
Good work. I like the finish on the walls. What sand and mix did u use for the walls
It was 4:1 scratch and 5:1 finish with extra Lime 👍
Thanks. Another great video. That chippy will have white finger soon 😄
Haha thanks pal. I really appreciate that mate 😊
I have a Strawbale home and want todo concrete window sills inside. We have deep window sill.
What mix ratio for sand cement
Nice work there Blaine, just wondering where abouts you work as I'm in northwest UK and you sounded like a northern lad 😉 as in need of a house render as well as me cills cleaning up as they are looking battered. Cheers. Kev
I'll do en for you for a grand
My question is how do you WATERPROOF them? My house had pre-cast concrete sills with a rebar for strength. Constant water penetration has rusted the rebar and causes the concrete to split. I can patch the cracks with something like FLEXX, which is a sanded caulk to get a rough texture like the original concrete, but HOW DO I SEAL THE CONCRETE FROM FURTHER WATER DAMAGE?
i want to render around the sides and top around my back door. would you still do the whole bonding agent thing? (sorry im a complete novice)
😀 Bottom of a door from the joiner I bet, us joiners are nice that way. haha.👍
Hahaha that's it exactly my friend!! Bang on 😂
Really helpful mate. Been repairing some old damaged sandstone sills using timber forms and lots of trial and error. Never considered using beads to get the clean edges 🤣 Always struggle mix the mix, this weathers making it a bit too powdery even when covered in plastic and watered. What’s the ratio you are using?
Yeah that's how we did it in NZ - its great practice but it takes a lot more time ha! It's just a standard 5:1 with a bit of lime for that creamy consistency when floating. I also always use FEB Rendamix - that's always good to use pal! Great hearing from you and good luck with your sills 👍
Top man, only one sill left so may as well carry on with timber. But will Defo be looking into those beads for the next occasion. Thanks again, and keep those vids coming. This would have saved me so much time if I had discovered sooner! 👍🏻
Great Vid, very informative and excellent work, could you please tell me what the liquid (FDR ?) is you're brushing on is it akin to PVA/water mix, Thank you :)
Snorkherder it’s SBR it’s like a laytex sealer better than pva
It's also a waterproofer which is ideal for rendering projects 👍
Great work and filming whats ur render mix?
Banger 💯💪🏤
Cheers matey!!
Top banana pablo very very good job.
Haha cheers pal!
Hi mate, can you render over old sandstone, using the same techniques to build the cils back up, level and square? Love the vids, cheers!
What mix ratio do you apply for smooth coat render? Looks a top job that also 👍🏻
Did you put a groove in underneath?
Can this be done to cover tile windows cills?
Yeah mate. You just need to use a pre-grit like Rendagrip before rendering. It works a treat!
When the video started I thought, ‘how is he going to do the drip edges?’ But using the corner bead is genius. Reinforces the corners and makes it a doddle to do the drip edge. Nice job! 👍🏼
Thank you mate and thank you for the comment. I really appreciate it my friend 👍
The sill should be on a pitch to allow water to drip away from the window.
Beautiful, great workmanship and patience!!
Thank you mate. I really appreciate that!!
How do you render under the sill edge
It's the same process pal 👍
the sticky tackyness is the thing i find most so called grab adhesives dont have, like pink grip grip fill etc. they just end up like playdoh, so ill try that trex stuff and see what its like
That's why I struggle with Grip Fill - its great when it dries but it doesn't have that instant grab like the T-Rex adhesive. This stuff is great 💪
Hi a similar window sill however it is rotten any suggestions on how I can repair this?
Depending on the rot, you might have to rip it out and start again. You can’t work on a rotten background I’m afraid pal
@@PlasteringForBeginners Thank you for your response
Did you need to use sbr for the top coat? with it being wet and having a mechanical key i thought it would of been alright?
I just had it next to me and for sills I'm always a bit cautious - I've seen them go drummy before so I was playing it safe pal 👍
Hi just wandering what size speed skim would you recommend thanks in advance
I like the 1.2m but 900mm is the perfect size as an all rounder my friend 👍
Cheers thanks for help 👌
Plastering For Beginners I’ve never seen a steel trowel to flatten s and c render at the final stage. Always sponge float or sponge. Would you do an entire house with the steel trowel this way?
Also was it too tight to put beads on at the back of the cill? That’s why you free handed them?
Cheers you do great work
Nice. Can you do a vid on forming window and door head top drip beads
I'll try and get one lined up my friend!!
Could you do a video with sand and lime if you haven't already done one
I'll look into my friend 👍
Looks good, but you barely have slope for water run off. No flashing or caulking to keep water from collecting between window and sill.
There's a a fair fall and you wouldn't use caulk outside. Sand cement is time tested and is designed to be used externally 👌
Nice my brotha , feel me ????
👍👍👍
Rumour has it Blaine's just beginning to break that float in...
Hahaha that cracked me up! I'm still trying 🤣🤣