Can grout colour be changed?! :(
9 years ago
last modified: 9 years ago
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Comments (19)
- 9 years ago
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Need advice on changing the colour of brick
Comments (20)Gosh this is an old thread, lucky I'm still attached to it. Sorry Susan, can't help you, the Houzzer is in the US and they have different brands to us and I've also learned even if the brands are the same, the colours aren't necessarily the same. Did you check out the brand Luke posted? I believe Luke is no longer with Houzz unfortuantely. Personally, I would never touch brick, it is a timeless product and usually messing with it only results in more maintenance over time, where natural brick is pretty much maintenance free. I also read the other day red bricks are coming back in again - there is always a cycle if you wait long enough. My old house was red brick and I had the green guttering, roof tiles and such but over the years the roof tiles lost their colour and went grey. When I sold the house the new owners painted all the guttering and outside trims charcoal grey. As much as I hate grey and am over the constant use of it, I have to say it really looks great and gives new life to the bricks. Maybe this is the way to go with updating facades, just change trims to the current fad colours, they need painting regularly anyway, and leave bricks to the natural cycle of trends....See MoreWhich grout colour should I choose?
Comments (42)What a beautiful tile! Rule of the tump - always match the grout to the tile. Specially with such a strong patterned tile, otherwise the grout also becomes a clashing pattern. I'd pick light grey to avoid pure white cleaning issues. I have these type of tiles in my patio, you will have to be seal them with penetrating sealer after installation, but other then that you will love them forever...See Morechanging garage door colour
Comments (2)Dark, it grounds the house...See MoreWhat colour I can change to match house brick?
Comments (8)I'd offer a slight variation on dreamers paint ideas . Without being too rude , right now it looks like any one of 10,000 rentals -- my dad made good money 40 years ago doing what we now call 'flipping' -- buy an ex-rental , paint and paper the inside , add new letterbox , new front door , and a couple of rock gardens . Dark trim is on trend at the moment ( I personally think it will tire soon , just like forrest green and mission brown did ) but it is the 'go to' . It also has the advantage of making things melt together . So my simplistic ( i.e. cheapish haha ) solution would be to paint the white poles and rails in a metallic charcoal ( visually , it will make all the trim look similar , but also take the harshness off the present white bits ) . Then that little fence at the right hand end , a screen around the bins , anything else visible ( fences etc that aren't in the photo ? ) I'd also do in a charcoal stain . The white entrance door would sort of work then , so stand back and see ( after doing the charcoal rails etc ) if you like it . Or if you like colour , a bright red , orange or yellow door will add some Wow for $50 plus your time , and with the charcoal , look 20 years more modern too . I think I'd even try a narrow 8mm 'pinstripe' along the front gutter in the same colour as the door , just to really emphasis things , without overdoing it . Doing it freehand might look amateurish , but masking would be a pain -- I'd probably just buy 8mm wide vinyl online , and run it along a crease or similar in the gutters . If budget is real tight , doing the letterbox pole and letterbox roof in charcoal , and buying a big $12 brass look number at Bunnings would look okay , but obviously a $150 new 'designer' letterbox would be better still -- I wonder if we'll even have letterboxes in 10 years time ? And add gardens as per dreamers ideas -- anything with a modern look and variety ....See More- 9 years ago
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