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Anyone have a good technique or advice for removing a texture from a
brick? Our house is 16 years old and our fireplace wall is a deep/dark red brick with a wavy texture that sticks out as much as 3/8". The wall is really dated looking. I want to preserve the look of brick but we would rather cover it over than look at it in its current state. Ideally I would like to smooth down the face of the brick to be flat. I was putting up crown along that wall and needed to smooth down one row near the top. I tried a chisel, grinding wheel (don't ask) and other grinding attachments with no real luck. The brick is way too hard to make this a reasonable job across an entire wall. Other questions: - what can I expect to be inside the brick? will the brick have consistent color throughout? - on some 'paint removal' threads they advise not to sandblast on exterior walls due to weather protection, etc... what would I suffer with inside? Is there risk of breaking bricks? Thanks for any tips/advice. -Sean |
#2
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![]() "Sean" wrote in message om... Anyone have a good technique or advice for removing a texture from a brick? Our house is 16 years old and our fireplace wall is a deep/dark red brick with a wavy texture that sticks out as much as 3/8". The wall is really dated looking. I want to preserve the look of brick but we would rather cover it over than look at it in its current state. Ideally I would like to smooth down the face of the brick to be flat. I was putting up crown along that wall and needed to smooth down one row near the top. I tried a chisel, grinding wheel (don't ask) and other grinding attachments with no real luck. The brick is way too hard to make this a reasonable job across an entire wall. Other questions: - what can I expect to be inside the brick? will the brick have consistent color throughout? - on some 'paint removal' threads they advise not to sandblast on exterior walls due to weather protection, etc... what would I suffer with inside? Is there risk of breaking bricks? Forget it- there is no practical way to change the look of existing brick without covering it. If it really bugs you, you could always add another layer of brick. They have thin bricks available, or you could wear out a couple wet saw blades making your own from regular brick you like. Apply chicken wire to the existing brick with anchors, lay a mud bed of mortar, and apply the new brick like tile, 'grouting' with mortar after it sets up a little. BTW, think about resale value- if fireplace wall now matches outside brick, it can look 'wrong' to many buyers if it doesn't match after you change it. aem sends.... |
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