Applying the finish coat
The finish coat is applied in the same arcing motion over the brushed plaster. The emphasis is on creating a smooth, trowel free finish. This coat takes a little more elbow grease as well.
Like the base coat, the finish coat is applied using a two-coat application method. The finish coat should be pressed up tight as it is applied. The main objective when putting on the scratch coat is to get an even thickness with as few trowel lines and cat's eyes as possible. I always use three strokes to put it on. The first stroke spreads it on, a backstroke presses it in the opposite direction and the third stroke comes back again erasing the trowel line. All three strokes happen in one continuous motion, without the trowel leaving the surface.
The plaster is troweled on in arcs. The reason is that trowels have a slight bow to them. The front edge of the trowel is pressed as the trowel is arced. On the back stroke, the same applies except the back edge gets pressed. Executed correctly true flat surfaces are achievable without trowel lines.
The double is a lighter coat that is applied with just two strokes. I like to leave the surface near perfectly smooth at this point. The fewer times the trowel is run over the surface the better. Over troweling will only make things worse. When the plaster begins to set, it can be water troweled to a smooth finish. The key is to be patient, because if the plaster is troweled too soon, it will pull and drag, causing lumps, ridges, and blisters. I use water sparingly, because too much water can also cause blisters and weaken the plaster. When the plaster begins to turn brown in color (brown out), it begins to harden. At this point we begin hard polishing the surface.
Before calling it a day, we ensure that plaster has been removed from all electrical boxes, that door and window jambs are clean and bottoms are left neat and clean so the baseboard and trim can be installed without the carpenters having to scrape or chip away my plaster. The plaster is now ready for primer and paint. Though the surfaces are left very smooth and polished, the painters should never sand the surface. Sanding is not necessary for the primer to adhere. Sanding will only mar and weaken the hard-packed and polished surface.