Thanks, I'm planning repointing parts of an old house, so the colour is reasonably important, but not critical. I think some kind of white sharp sand may be suitable, or a mix. Is there a brand of sharp sand that you could recommend?The basic mix that you see quoted often is 1:3 nhl3.5 to sharp sand. But there are stacks and stacks of variations on this.
Be aware that "sharp sand" is hugely variable. I will buy sharp sand from different vendors depending on the job that I want to do with it.
We built a bungalow years ago and the father in law was a very experienced bricklayer, We wanted a raked joint for contrast as the bricks were yellow and most mortar is quite light in this area. He recommended not doing that as it would hold water - there is a similar type of joint that wont hold the water. Instead he brought sand from a supplier that wasn't washed and it produced a lot darker mortar.I will buy sharp sand from different vendors depending on the job that I want to do with it.
Is there a brand of sharp sand that you could recommend?
Thanks, That's what I wanted to hear. I was afraid it was a real dark art and if you didn't do things right it would fail early.You would need to stuff it up quite badly indeed to be "redoing it in 6 months"
Is the choice of sand to get the colour right, or other reasons?the bigger issue was getting hold of brown building sand which has become very rare in our location.
See above. It may fail early even when done by experts.Thanks, That's what I wanted to hear. I was afraid it was a real dark art and if you didn't do things right it would fail early.
We are re working some brick panels set within oak frame that we did 14 years ago, the main panel is fine but the perimeter has cracked as the oak has moved, I had to submit samples for the LBC originally which was a mixture of brown building sand, brown sharp sand and the HNL. The brown sand is no longer available so I had to drive a 2 1/2 hour round trip to find some AHH. Red sand is readily available but would look very pink in comparison the the old stuff.Is the choice of sand to get the colour right, or other reasons?
Thanks, That's what I wanted to hear. I was afraid it was a real dark art and if you didn't do things right it would fail early.
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