An ideal wall to work upon is one that will be sufficiently hard to have but little suction, nearly but not quite non-absorbent. The patent plastered walls left either in a... Modern Painter's Cyclopedia - Page 63by Frederick Maire - 1918 - 447 pagesFull view - About this book
| Jane Powell - Architecture - 2006 - 228 pages
...special 6- to 8-inch-wide brush made of boar bristles. According to the Modern Painter's Cyclopedia, An ideal wall to work upon is one that will be sufficiently...non-absorbent. The patent plastered walls left either in a stippled rough state or covered over with a skim coat of plaster paris [sic] make an excellent surface... | |
| |