There are several different kinds of plastering. ‘Dot and dab’ refers to a base layer of plasterboard which is attached to a wall using ‘dabs’ of adhesive. ‘Floating’ is a technique where a backing or undercoat plaster is applied to walls. ‘Skimming’ or ‘reskimming’ refers to the very thin final decorative layer of plaster.
Beaminster
Beaminster is a village and also civil parish in Dorset, England, positioned in the Dorset Council management area around 15 miles (24 kilometres) northwest of the county town Dorchester. It is sited in a bowl-shaped valley near the resource of the small River Brit. The 2013 mid-year quote of the population of Beaminster church is 3,100. In its history Beaminster has been a centre of manufacture of bed linen and also woollens, the raw materials for which were created in the bordering countryside. The town experienced three significant fires in the 17th and also 18th centuries; the first of these, throughout the English Civil War, nearly destroyed the material of the community. Beaminster parish church is noteworthy for its architecture, particularly its tower.