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#1
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Mortar doesn't match... what to do?
misc.consumers.house
I have recently purchased a newly built home and when they bricked the home, the mortar color is quite a bit lighter in certain places than others. Where this problem becomes an issue is that it happens on two walls in the front of the house and it's exactly half of the wall. If it were sporadic, it wouldn't be as noticeable, but when an entire wall is 1/2 one shade and 1/2 a much darker shade, it looks pretty bad and really stands out. Is there anything that can be done to correct this? Something that can be done to make the mortar match all the way around the home? |
#2
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"PWizard" wrote in news:1107211288.762926.150310
@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com: misc.consumers.house I have recently purchased a newly built home and when they bricked the home, the mortar color is quite a bit lighter in certain places than others. Where this problem becomes an issue is that it happens on two walls in the front of the house and it's exactly half of the wall. If it were sporadic, it wouldn't be as noticeable, but when an entire wall is 1/2 one shade and 1/2 a much darker shade, it looks pretty bad and really stands out. Is there anything that can be done to correct this? Something that can be done to make the mortar match all the way around the home? The cheapest route would be to label this "character" and just get used to it. The next best bet would be to have a mason come out and inspect it, and give you an opinion more useful than you're likely to get here. Tuckpointing the brick would probably do the trick, you'll need a real estimate to know how much that'll cost. |
#3
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In article ,
"David W." wrote: I have recently purchased a newly built home and when they bricked the home, the mortar color is quite a bit lighter in certain places than others. The cheapest route would be to label this "character" and just get used to it. The next best bet would be to have a mason come out and inspect it, and give you an opinion more useful than you're likely to get here. Tuckpointing the brick would probably do the trick, you'll need a real estimate to know how much that'll cost. Once you close on the house, you are kind of stuck when it comes to issues like this. Too bad you didn't see it earlier. I know that there is dye that can be put into mortar when you mix it up. I wonder if there is any type of dye you could use now, one that would absorb into the mortar, but not discolor the brick? Sounds like something to ask the National Association Of Concrete. Check google, I bet there is some kind of industry organization. Or check you local brick yard. Or the mason who put this stuff up. Or a competent mason who knows how to mix mortar in the first place. -john- -- ================================================== ==================== John A. Weeks III 952-432-2708 Newave Communications http://www.johnweeks.com ================================================== ==================== |
#4
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Mortar, just like concrete changes colour as it ages. The weather eats away
the surface cement exposing the sand and/or aggregate. Now if the mortar was made with the same colour sand, it will age to match the old stuff. I had an addition on the back of my house, the mortar took about 3 years to change from very white to a light brown-grey, now it is exactly the same as the older mortar. "John A. Weeks III" wrote in message ... In article , "David W." wrote: I have recently purchased a newly built home and when they bricked the home, the mortar color is quite a bit lighter in certain places than others. The cheapest route would be to label this "character" and just get used to it. The next best bet would be to have a mason come out and inspect it, and give you an opinion more useful than you're likely to get here. Tuckpointing the brick would probably do the trick, you'll need a real estimate to know how much that'll cost. Once you close on the house, you are kind of stuck when it comes to issues like this. Too bad you didn't see it earlier. I know that there is dye that can be put into mortar when you mix it up. I wonder if there is any type of dye you could use now, one that would absorb into the mortar, but not discolor the brick? Sounds like something to ask the National Association Of Concrete. Check google, I bet there is some kind of industry organization. Or check you local brick yard. Or the mason who put this stuff up. Or a competent mason who knows how to mix mortar in the first place. -john- -- ================================================== ==================== John A. Weeks III 952-432-2708 Newave Communications http://www.johnweeks.com ================================================== ==================== |
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