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.
Pickering
Pickering is an ancient market town as well as civil parish in the Ryedale area of North Yorkshire, England, on the boundary of the North York Moors National Park. Historically part of the North Riding of Yorkshire, it sits at the foot of the moors, overlooking the Vale of Pickering to the south. According to tale the community was founded by King Peredurus around 270 BC; however, the community as it exists today is of middle ages origin. The legend has it that the king shed his ring and charged a young maiden of taking it, but later on that day the ring was found in a pike captured in the River Costa for his supper. The king was so delighted to find his ring he married the young maiden; the name Pike-ring transformed throughout the years to Pickering. It is a wonderful story told to fit the name, but it is not the beginning. Pickering is believed to be called after the fans of an Anglian man called Picer or some such personal name-- the Picer-ingas. The vacationer venues of Pickering Parish Church, with its middle ages wall surface paints, Pickering Castle, the North Yorkshire Moors Railway and also Beck Isle Museum have made Pickering popular with site visitors. Neighboring places include Malton, Norton-on-Derwent and Scarborough.