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Tiling kitchen - painted surface, help!

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Hi all,

I know this has been discussed previously but I need help with my specific job...

I want to tile in my kitchen between the wall units and the work surface. It's a new build so I'm sure it's plasterboard painted with magnolia emulsion. My tiles are 100x200mm and will be 5 tiles tall.

What would be the best way to go about this as I'm reading conflicting answers elsewhere? I don't want to fix a tile backing over my current wall for decorative reasons and am worried to sand the paint off as I'm assuming the plasterboard was painted directly and not skimmed over, i.e I don't want to end up sanding the paper underneath. It's too hard to remove and replace the current plasterboard as the units are attached through it and there are around five electrical sockets to deal with.

What would you do based on the above?
 
Ok. Try and see if you can wash the paint off.
Just used a non scratch scouring pad from the sink, it came off quite easy. See pic - that is a skim showing through isn't it?

20200524_165141.jpg
 
Ok , no need for primer then. Adhere to the drying times before grouting.
Hi. I'm taking the paint off still however I've had to pull off a stainless steel splashback(?) behind the hob. The adhesive from this has pulled off some of the plaster and some of the paper from the plasterboard. I don't want to replace the whole section so would it be ok to prime these bits with PVA or should I cut out the paper down to the plasterboard mortar and then prime?

I could ignore as the majority of the tile will be fixed to the plaster.

20200602_152611.jpg


20200602_152618.jpg
 

Dave

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Hi. I'm taking the paint off still however I've had to pull off a stainless steel splashback(?) behind the hob. The adhesive from this has pulled off some of the plaster and some of the paper from the plasterboard. I don't want to replace the whole section so would it be ok to prime these bits with PVA or should I cut out the paper down to the plasterboard mortar and then prime?

I could ignore as the majority of the tile will be fixed to the plaster.

View attachment 112649

View attachment 112650

don’t prime with pva , sbr or acrylic with suffice and use a patch up plaster and leave to dry
 

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