There are many unusual forms of fireplace
with which we are not particularly concerned.
For example, one sees occasionally an opening shaped
like an inverted heart or like an ace of spades.
It is possible to make a fireplace of this kind work
satisfactorily, but it is by no means certain that
this result can be accomplished at the first trial
nor that the fire will continue to work properly under
all conditions. It is safer always to adhere
to the established type of rectangular opening, or
to depart from this only to the extent of having the
top an arch of large radius. Whenever the top
is permitted to vary more than a slight extent from
the horizontal there is the danger of having the smoke
escape into the room at the top.
There is one other type that deserves
special mention and that is the double fireplace,
where two openings in adjacent rooms are served by
a single flue between them. The only way in which
this affects the two vital principles mentioned above
is that the cross-section area of the flue should
be one-tenth of the combined areas of the openings.
The throat will in this case be in the middle of the
chimney with the smoke shelf on either side of it.
It is essential in a fireplace of this kind that there
be no disturbing draft tending to pass through the
opening from one room to the other.
Still another type which is even more
rarely seen is the open fire in the middle of a room,
such as may be desired occasionally in the lounging
room of a large club. Such an apparent anomaly
could be secured by suspending a metal flue and hood
from the roof, so that the lower edge of the truncated
pyramidal form at the bottom would form the upper
side of the fireplace “opening” at a convenient
height above the hearth of brick, stone, tile or concrete.
It is conceivable that an effective and thoroughly
practical fireplace could be thus devised, having
the flue and hood of wrought iron or copper, suspended
and steadied by chains or bars from the ceiling and
surrounding walls. In such a form the same principle
of a fixed ratio between opening (here the entire
perimeter of the hood multiplied by the distance above
the hearth) and cross-section of flue would have to
be observed, and here also it would be well to provide
as fully as possible against the presence of disturbing
drafts.