Encyclopedia

lining paper

lining paper

1. A paper, usually waterproof, fastened to the studding of frame buildings before nailing on the weatherboarding; used under slates and shingles in roofing.
2. An undercoat paper, applied to a surface as a base for a decorative wallpaper.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture and Construction. Copyright © 2003 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
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References in periodicals archive
When cool, remove the lining paper (the cake has a crumbly 5.
When cool, remove the lining paper For the icing, beat together the butter, icing sugar and lemon zest.
Carefully peel off the lining paper. Roll up the cake, along with the fresh piece of baking parchment, from the short end.
QWE are about to decorate a room with lining paper painted with a cream matt emulsion.
Q We have three rooms decorated with a thick lining paper and then painted.
Usually if you're painting wallpaper, it's lining paper that goes on first, then the joints get filled, then you emulsion the paper and during this process you would check the condition of the walls.
Run a palette knife around the edge of the tin, turn out the loaf, peel off the lining paper, and finish cooling on a wire rack.
Lining paper comes in various thicknesses, with the thickest designed for walls in the worst state of repair.
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