Jump to content

Plasterer strongly recommended ( Aaron )


Crystal Matt

Recommended Posts

  • 4 months later...
This is my second recommendation (or third - I forget!) for Aaron. He recently plastered a bedroom for us. He is tidy and quick, reasonable and friendly. His plastering is a very high standard - I know this having suffered through a bodge job in our kitchen and hall with a building company redoing our kitchen. Highly recommended!
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...
  • 1 month later...
  • 3 weeks later...

Another recommendation for Aaron from me after finding him via this thread.


I had him in three days last week removing two ceiling roses in the dining and sitting room then plastering over a smooth finish and also removing and replacing some coving.


Really pleased with the work, great communication throughout and a pleasant chap to deal with. Sill definitely use him again if I require any more work like this.


Simon

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...
  • 2 months later...
  • 4 weeks later...
  • 2 months later...
  • 1 month later...
This is the fourth time we have used Aaron- amazing finish every time. More recently, we used him to remedy another plasterer?s work (came through a fully managed build and design company) which was awful. I?ve had other trades comment on the level of finish too. Highly recommended 07773 410661
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...
  • 5 months later...
  • 1 month later...
  • 2 weeks later...

I can fully endorse the recommendations for Aaron. We?ve used him on several occasions over the last few years and he does a great job everytime. He?s just completed some exterior rendering for us and it looks terrific. Very reliable, always tidy and charges reasonable rates. Highly recommended.


0773410661

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...
Aaron plastered our living room last week and did an incredible job, we're so happy with our new walls! Will definitely ask him back to do the other rooms if he's available. Great price, and lovely guy. Couldn't recommend him highly enough. He even hoovered when he'd finished! Brill.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...
Aaron recently worked on our flat for a week, squared off two fireplaces, fixed a crumbling ceiling and skimmed the bedroom and hall. He did an absolutely amazing job, was so clean and tidy and a really nice guy. We will definitely be having him back again and really can?t recommend him enough!
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 months later...
Aaron recently plastered my two bed flat and was fantastic. He touched up all my electrical work, repaired three large holes in my walls, and did an amazing job. The finish is amazing and he was very helpful all through the process. He left the flat super-clean and would recommend him to anyone.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 6 months later...

I?d also like to strongly recommend the work of Aaron (plasterer). 07773 410661


We?ve had him for other work before and were happy he was available again. Good price, great communication, and lovely chap to have around. Work took the time he said it would and he was also very flexible around our own timetable. Really neat tidying up mid job as well as at the end. Can?t recommend highly enough, fantastic finish on our walls. Thank you, Aaron.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...
Just wanted to add to the chorus of recommendations on here for Aaron. He was able to fit some work in at short notice, was reasonably priced and most importantly did a great job. A lovely guy as well, super professional and communicative. Highly recommend.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • A repetitive tried and tested cycle that seems to be slowing down in London thankfully. Brixton was the start. Councils consciously and purposely let an area decline until that area is next on the list for social and ethnic cleansing and ultimately gentrification. In come the first wave of arty/ creatives to squat and house share. A few coffee shops and cool but inexpensive cafe/ bars and art spaces open up. The crackheads, dealers and other assorted criminals who were once left to operate openly and brazenly to sell, shop lift, mug, beg, purchase,  publicly consume on decent folks doorsteps, stairwells,in bin sheds and without fear of the law begin to be targeted, rounded up and moved on. A few more jaunty and sustainable coffee shops/ bars appear . The Guardian and other facilitators in the media jump on the bandwagon, first claims of vibrancy are rolled out. Next step a few cool retro clothing shops pop up selling ' reclaimed Levi's for more than they originally cost and ten times the price of what the recently departed charity shop charged. Foxtons open a branch and the arty types and first wavers/ drivers have there first moan about there initially paltry rents going up. The guardian do a generic lets move to Brixton, Dalston, Hackney, Deptford, Walthamstow type double pager. Interview a graphic designer or two who have just bought a former crack den on the manor for next to peanuts. They will later bemoan the next wave who have more money than them. Cool, edgy and vibrant are now the buzzword bingo must use lingo. Few more coffee shops ( how original ) Pop up everything,. Organic and sour dough move in. The night time economy starts to thrive, more cool bars and eateries open. More squats and the last crack house that was once one of many are cleared out. Second wave is around the corner.   All of a sudden there's a visible police presence again and the streets are safe for fun seekers with plenty of disposable cash to chuck about on a dose of vibrancy with added coolness. By this stage even the locally brewed beer is organic. There's queues outside the newly arrived organic, sourdough, artisan and sustainable bakers. Instagram has Brixton trending. The greasy spoon of thirty year has gone cause the lease is up and the landlord has hiked the rents up by 60/70%. Followed by small family run independents that served the community  for decades and more.  The local characters, activists, eccentrics are getting less and less. There's a new show in town for a week or two and until the next brand arrives. Brewdog move in. Former job centres are converted into bars but peak edginess means it's still called the job centre. Followed by a couple more chain eateries. The resident DJ'S and music venues are replaced by another generic brand boasting guest chefs. The Guardian lifestyle section is now on it's fifth or sixth orgasm. Turn a few pages and hypocrisy is rampant with articles on the evils of gentrification, foxtons, capitalism, social cleansing and unaffordable housing. The middle classes continue to arrive in there droves to buy into the vibrancy and multiculturalism supposedly on offer. There isn't much multiculturalism going on at the packed latest place to eat, drink and fart. The multiculturalism on show comes in the form of bar staff, doorman and cheap as chips uber drivers and delivery workers. Rice and peas, jerk everything, red stripe at six quid a can from some hipster haunt that is currently flavour of the month and the place to be seen. The first wavers are now blaming the latest hedge funded brand that's pulled into town for driving gentrification and there soon to be hastened departure to be first wavers again somewhere else. Less cool but up and coming here we come. Covid has certainly helped/ been a factor in slowing down the process of gentrification. I also think it may be the driver for almost putting a stop to it. Remote working, less need to move to London to be near an office, less disposable cash, sky high rents, worthless degrees that relied on that disposable cash , different priorities, knife and gang crime and a large dose of much needed realism has put a huge spanner in the works for the shitty process and cycle that is/ was the gentrification and social cleansing of working class London. Manchester and Liverpool is next on the list for the planners. Thankfully.
    • Can you just queue up to withdraw cash or are other transactions like stamp purchasing required?  Do M&S do cash back?
    • Or don't stop using cash. Stop using your phone or even your watch as a banknote. At the same time avoid the risk of having your card cloned at cash points, by hand held card readers, oyster readers and point-of sale terminals to name a few. God only knows how much damage we're doing to the planet because all the above must require a hell of a lot of resources and juice from the grid. It won't happen though. I know of quite a few people who deem carrying cash about as a pain/ chore. But not a big lump of plastic with a screen and full of personal information that can be easily gleamed. I feel the same about carrying a phone about so i don't most of the time. I'll be in the minority but certainly don't see or treat a phone as a necessity.  You can't get a banknote out of your sky rocket with a phone in your hand. It's become a source of dopamine for many. It's an addiction for many. They're an easy target for thieves. They're a godsend to cyber fraudsters who are stealing billions and are doing so without the need of cash points.
    • There used to be an Osteopath at The Gardens (not physio) but they have since left.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...