Mark A
Established Member
Hi chaps,
Not sure if this is the right department...
I've made 18 window boards for my house out of birch plywood with a softwood lipping on the front to simulate solid timber. The house is old and stone-built, and the internal sills are lime-rendered (as are the walls).
For a couple of weeks the window boards were placed in their corresponding positions unpainted, though I've since painted them with waterbased undercoat and satin. I noticed one particular board in an unused room had a postage stamp sized patch of mould growing on the edge nearest the window. I've re-sealed the window, so moisture shouldn't be coming in any more, though I'm a bit concerned about mould growing on the underside unseen after they're fixed in place.
Looking in my shed I found D4 external PVA, half a tin of black Evercryl and yacht varnish.
Are any of the above a permanent barrier against moisture and mould growth?
Or is there something else worth trying?
Cheers,
Mark
Sent from my Moto G (4) using Tapatalk
Not sure if this is the right department...
I've made 18 window boards for my house out of birch plywood with a softwood lipping on the front to simulate solid timber. The house is old and stone-built, and the internal sills are lime-rendered (as are the walls).
For a couple of weeks the window boards were placed in their corresponding positions unpainted, though I've since painted them with waterbased undercoat and satin. I noticed one particular board in an unused room had a postage stamp sized patch of mould growing on the edge nearest the window. I've re-sealed the window, so moisture shouldn't be coming in any more, though I'm a bit concerned about mould growing on the underside unseen after they're fixed in place.
Looking in my shed I found D4 external PVA, half a tin of black Evercryl and yacht varnish.
Are any of the above a permanent barrier against moisture and mould growth?
Or is there something else worth trying?
Cheers,
Mark
Sent from my Moto G (4) using Tapatalk