My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Join our Property forum for renovation, DIY, and house selling advice.

Property/DIY

Painting a brick fireplace?

27 replies

SeanPencil · 16/01/2016 18:33

We are the proud owners of the World's Ugliest Fireplace. It is red brick inside and out, with the same red brick forming the hearth. The bricks are black inside from soot, and the outside ones forming the surround are a bit faded, plus there is a crack in the cement on the hearth.

I'm thinking I'd like to paint the whole thing, is it difficult? I'm guessing it's messy. I was thinking of doing the inside black and the outside a v pale grey or neutral eg F&B Skimming Stone.

OP posts:
Report
TheWildRumpyPumpus · 16/01/2016 18:41

I'm afraid I hold the crown for World's Ugliest Fireplace Owner! I'll let you hold onto it until tomorrow when I can put a photo up for comparison though Grin

Sympathies and commiserations - I hate mine and have no idea how to transform it. It would be a major job to rip it out and I'm not convinced by painting over it - can look even worse from some pictures I've seen online.

If ours weren't so big I would plaster over it.

Report
SeanPencil · 16/01/2016 18:50

Commiserations Rumpy. We can't afford a new one, but I really want to improve it as we're going to be putting the house on the market.

Ours is a weird shape too, it's curved at the top, pizza oven style, and protrudes out of the chimney breast. Grim. It's not even in a nice old character house.

Is yours one of those floor to ceiling brick chimney breast jobs? Please tell me it has inbuilt shelving. Grin

OP posts:
Report
SeanPencil · 16/01/2016 18:53

This is harmless enough.

Painting a brick fireplace?
OP posts:
Report
SeanPencil · 16/01/2016 18:54

Is this yours, Rumpy?Grin

Painting a brick fireplace?
OP posts:
Report
mumsnit · 16/01/2016 18:58

Not too difficult to paint. You could do more preparation than we did with the bricks but we just cleaned them, then ended up doing 3 coats of primer and two of emulsion (Just Walnut - Dulux ). Looks good - much better than the vile 80s red brick fashion statement we had before!!

Report
Bearbehind · 16/01/2016 19:03

I actually prefer the second photo to the first!

That white one looks horrific IMO.

If you are only doing it to sell them I wouldn't bother- different people have different tastes.

Ultimately both fireplaces above need major work- painting over the problem doesn't change that.

Report
ByTheSea · 16/01/2016 19:15

We did paint ours in our old house. I wasn't sure but DH was pretty insistent. FWIW, it looked a lot better once it was painted.

Report
SeanPencil · 16/01/2016 19:28

Mumsnit, did you use the fireplace after you painted the inside? I'm guessing you need to use special fireproof paint...

OP posts:
Report
mumsnit · 16/01/2016 20:07

We left the bricks inside unpainted as you can't really see them - we have a naice 80s fake coal gas fire arrangement which is neither use nor ornament Grin

Report
Coldtoeswarmheart · 16/01/2016 20:19

I prefer 80s brick to painted brick (I speak as the owner of an 80s brick fireplace adorned with a gopping outset gas fire, too).

Local fireplace shop quoted £2k to rip out and replace with a nice but boring gas fire and oak fireplace, so we are ignoring it for now as I don't have that spare right now....

Report
HappyHippyChick · 16/01/2016 20:24

Here is our monstrosity!

Painting a brick fireplace?
Report
HappyHippyChick · 16/01/2016 20:24

I've never considered painting it though.

Report
SingSongSlummy · 16/01/2016 20:28

We painted our vile tiled fireplace with stone paint and it's amazing. Look up Stonelux paint - you'd never know that it wasn't real stone

Report
SnuffleGruntSnorter · 16/01/2016 20:28

I don't really like painted brick and it's a real pain to remove - I spent months doing it in our old house. If you're selling anyway then could you just make the rest of the room bright and neutral and let the buyers decide what to do with it?

Report
Bearbehind · 16/01/2016 20:29

That fireplace truly wouldn't bother me happy I'd be far more irritated by the picture frame that doesn't look central

Report
Coldtoeswarmheart · 16/01/2016 20:30

Happy, if I had one of those I'd stick a little gas stove in it and be very pleased with it!

Report
TotalConfucius · 16/01/2016 20:45

The house before this one had a fireplace made from the same crazy paving that was in the front garden. Exactly the same. Lordy knows how they got it to stay up on the walls but the plasterer who got rid of it went straight onto an u planned holiday once it was done.

Report
HappyHippyChick · 16/01/2016 21:59

Everything is a bit wonky in our house Blush we are working on it! I don't really mind that fireplace too much, except there are bits where the previous owner painted the grout (?) white (in the middle upside down V bit)

Report
GasLIghtShining · 16/01/2016 23:58

Rumpy You only hold it because I replaced mine - 14 years I put up with it (plus our previous house had a brick fireplace too). Oh and the gas fire - well what can I say.

Report
Bearbehind · 17/01/2016 10:35

Sorry happy, that sounded rude, I just meant it as another example of people having different preferences, therefore not bothering to do anything with a fireplace for the sake of selling.

I hate things not being symmetrical/ central but I have a friend who deliberately ensures things aren't central etc.

Report
SeanPencil · 17/01/2016 11:32

Here's my hideous offering. It just looks dirty all the time, the hearth is stained and it's impossible to clean as it's unsealed red brick.

Painting a brick fireplace?
OP posts:
Report
Bearbehind · 17/01/2016 12:11

Leave it alone Grin

Trying to do anything with unsealed, very discoloured brick will end badly IMO.

It's clearly a working fire- even if you did paint it, it would still get dirty when used as the biggest dirty bit is the actual fireplace.

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

TheWildRumpyPumpus · 17/01/2016 12:12

Brace yourselves! It's 8ft wide with 2 tasteful pillars built in at each end (to display what?), tiled base and wooden mantelpiece. HIDEOUS!

(Please ignore the dead poinsettia, dust and KNex constructions.)

Painting a brick fireplace?
Report
MiaowTheCat · 17/01/2016 12:22

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

RunRabbitRunRabbit · 17/01/2016 12:29

That's not so bad. I wouldn't bother if you are selling. I would fill it with a beautifully laid (unlit) log fire for viewings.

What's above it? And to the sides? Is it the main focal point of the room?

You might be best off painting the walls and hanging a dramatic poster over it.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.