thanks
Jake
We did this once. It didn't look good so we tried to remove the paint.
It had been drawn into the microscopic cracks in the surface and looked
dreadful.
> What sort of paint should I use?
What colour do you want to paint it?
Mary
>
> thanks
>
> Jake
It might be worth more than you and everyone you know could ever
believe, so try a picture of it on ebay with the words "marble" in
description and mention the period its from but dont mention "awful".
Why on earth would anyone want to destroy a marble fireplace by
painting it, regardless of the colour?
--
alan
reply to alan(dot)holmes27(at)virgin(dot)net
>
> thanks
>
> Jake
Confirmed. These things can have quite surprising prices to the right
audience. You might find you have enough to get rid of it, replace it,
and have a bit in the bank.
>What sort of paint should I use?
Shellac undercoat please. Not a bad primer, and it makes cleaning it
off easier in a couple of decades' time.
Thanks for your replies. As for selling the fireplace. I top of the
fireplace has a chunk about the size of your fist broken off it (like
that when I bought the house). Plus if I sell it on ebay I am in
northern ireland making ship it expensive. I may stick it on ebay and
see what happens as it is quite big. I am also going to replace the
insert to see if that improves it any. I would like to keep it but it
just does not look good at the minute.
>>Why on earth would anyone want to destroy a marble fireplace by
>>painting it, regardless of the colour?
Because it does not look good in the room there is little point in
keeping it if most people including myself dont like it. However if I
heard someone was going to paint over a marble fireplace I would say
the same.
thanks for your replies,
Jake
Andy Dingley <din...@codesmiths.com> wrote in message news:<8tf721tj9vdj4siao...@4ax.com>...
>>What colour do you want to paint it?
I am currently thinking charcoal grey but if I would be happy with white or cream.
thanks
jake
"Mary Fisher" <mary....@zetnet.co.uk> wrote in message news:<42236179$0$2657$4c56...@master.news.zetnet.net>...
I think the advice about selling it is the best solution.
Mary
You could always ask any local architectural salvage specialists if
they'd be interested.
This is good advice. Also any fireplace shops in your area, particularly
those that deal in antique ones. They can remove and often repair to high
standards, sometimes using marble recovered from other pieces.