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-   -   Exposed brick effect indoor tiles? (https://www.diybanter.com/uk-diy/2501-exposed-brick-effect-indoor-tiles.html)

Nick October 6th 03 04:46 PM

Exposed brick effect indoor tiles?
 
I love indoor exposed brick walls (depending on the bricks,
obviously), and was wondering if there are any tiles around with this
effect.

Like you can buy wood laminate instead of a proper boarded floor.
Can you get tiles that look like exposed bricks to stick on
plasterboard, that look convincing?

Any help would be great.

Thanks
Nick


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Christian McArdle October 6th 03 05:04 PM

Exposed brick effect indoor tiles?
 
Like you can buy wood laminate instead of a proper boarded floor.
Can you get tiles that look like exposed bricks to stick on
plasterboard, that look convincing?


Yes. The best ones are actually just slivers of brick. You apply using a
suitable bonding pattern. Some sort of modified Flemish bond, with
variations to break up the pattern looks far better than a stretcher bond,
which looks cheap, miserly and modern. You finish off by pointing the tiles
with mortar, just like a real wall. The effect is indistinguishable from a
real brick wall if done well.

Christian.



BillR October 6th 03 08:01 PM

Exposed brick effect indoor tiles?
 
Christian McArdle wrote:
Like you can buy wood laminate instead of a proper boarded floor.
Can you get tiles that look like exposed bricks to stick on
plasterboard, that look convincing?


Yes. The best ones are actually just slivers of brick. You apply
using a suitable bonding pattern. Some sort of modified Flemish bond,
with variations to break up the pattern looks far better than a
stretcher bond, which looks cheap, miserly and modern. You finish off
by pointing the tiles with mortar, just like a real wall. The effect
is indistinguishable from a real brick wall if done well.

Christian.


These used to very common in pub makeovers 20 years ago. My local has just
got rid of them.
They were quite effective.



Nick October 7th 03 08:43 AM

Exposed brick effect indoor tiles?
 
Guys - thanks for your replies.

Can you buy slivers of brick like that? Or do you have to get them specially cut?

I'm not familiar with Flemish or Stretcher bonds? What are these?

Nick


"BillR" wrote in message ...
Christian McArdle wrote:
Like you can buy wood laminate instead of a proper boarded floor.
Can you get tiles that look like exposed bricks to stick on
plasterboard, that look convincing?


Yes. The best ones are actually just slivers of brick. You apply
using a suitable bonding pattern. Some sort of modified Flemish bond,
with variations to break up the pattern looks far better than a
stretcher bond, which looks cheap, miserly and modern. You finish off
by pointing the tiles with mortar, just like a real wall. The effect
is indistinguishable from a real brick wall if done well.

Christian.


These used to very common in pub makeovers 20 years ago. My local has just
got rid of them.
They were quite effective.


Christian McArdle October 7th 03 09:26 AM

Exposed brick effect indoor tiles?
 
I'm not familiar with Flemish or Stretcher bonds? What are these?

Stetcher bond is just bricks laid end to end, alternating by half a brick's
width every course. Most modern houses are built like this as it is the
cheapest and quickest way to build a single leaf wall. Modern houses have
cavities, so the outer wall is only one brick wide.

Older houses had solid walls, with usually double brick thickness. For this,
you need some of the bricks to be laid across the thickness of the wall to
bond the wall together. The most common way to do this is the Flemish bond,
where you lay bricks alternately across and along the wall. You will likely
see such bonding on most Victorian buildings. However, the Victorians did
like to break down the monotony by varying the bond. Perhaps missing out
occasional cross bonding bricks. This is why even a plain Victorian wall
looks less austere than a modern stretcher bonding.

Christian.



BillR October 7th 03 11:41 AM

Exposed brick effect indoor tiles?
 
Nick wrote:
Guys - thanks for your replies.

Can you buy slivers of brick like that? Or do you have to get them
specially cut?

Yes you can, or used to be able to. They are purely for decorative purposes
but look just like real bricks when fitted.



Nick October 7th 03 04:54 PM

Exposed brick effect indoor tiles?
 
Thanks again guys, great advice. I know what you mean know about the
brick pattern - it makes sense.

Any idea where to buy slivers of brick? Local B&Q?

Nick


"BillR" wrote in message ...
Nick wrote:
Guys - thanks for your replies.

Can you buy slivers of brick like that? Or do you have to get them
specially cut?

Yes you can, or used to be able to. They are purely for decorative purposes
but look just like real bricks when fitted.



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