There is not a particularly wide choice
of materials available for the finish of the hearth
and fireplace. Stone, brick, cement and tile
exhaust the possibilities, although with combinations
of these we have all the variety that we could wish.
Stone is suitable only in certain
environments the informal shack or log
cabin chiefly, though of course it is impossible to
make any hard and fast rule in the matter.
Brick is almost never out of place.
Perhaps it is the association with the fireplaces
that have been built by our fathers and grandfathers,
or perhaps it is the inherent worth and fitness of
the material itself that puts it forward as a first
choice. Undoubtedly the practical consideration
that it is easier and more economical to build has
something to do with the matter.
Concrete is a newcomer in the field
of fireplace facing and as yet it cannot be said to
have shown any particular reason why it should displace
the other materials. With the ordinary heat developed
in an open fire of wood there is no likelihood of
cracking the concrete facing if the material has been
properly mixed and applied, although there seems to
be a vague impression that this might be a real danger.
The color of concrete gives it no particular recommendation,
for it is one that remains unchanged by fire, though
not unstained by smoke. Brick, on the other hand,
and tile, have the very closest possible association
with fire in the making, which gives them a peculiar
fitness for this purpose.
Tile, the last of the four materials,
gives more latitude in design than any of the others,
sometimes too much latitude we feel. If understandingly
used, nothing could be more appropriate and attractive,
but tile has been used so carelessly that somehow we
have a feeling that the tiled fireplace is for show
rather than for use. In any case, there is no
question whatever regarding the unfitness of the glazed
tiles which have made horrors of thousands of pseudo
fireplace openings. It is only the mat-glazed
or unglazed tiles that have any right to be used in
such a place.
Since this little volume has for its
subject the fireplace rather than the mantel, little
need be said regarding the latter outward form, though
there is no doubt that a whole book on the subject
might profitably be written. To touch upon the
subject as lightly as space will permit, we can probably
do no better than to suggest the obvious type of mantel
for one or two of the more common architectural styles,
and recommend that in other styles the architect be
allowed sufficient latitude in design and expense
to distinguish this important feature of hall, living-room,
dining-room or library with the characteristics of
the style he has worked out for the house itself.
The modern home along Colonial lines
is perhaps the commonest problem, and incidentally
the easiest, for the old models of delicately detailed
white-painted wood mantels are so well known and so
universally admired that modern reproductions along
good lines and reasonable cost are easily obtained.
For the English plaster or half-timber
house the architect will doubtless design a special
mantel, in scale and in harmony with the dark paneling
and other architectural woodwork, probably with a paneled
over-mantel if the cost is not too rigorously held
down.
In a house which breaks away from
the historic architectural styles, as so many of the
stucco buildings of the day do, the mantel treatment
offers particularly interesting possibilities.
Frequently the mantel is done away with entirely and
the chimney breast treated independently as a whole.
With the very informal type of summer
home where a rough stone for facing and chimney is
employed, the mantel treatment can hardly be kept
too simple and unobtrusive in its rugged strength.
A heavy log, planed to a smooth top surface and resting
on two projecting stone brackets, is frequently used
with good effect. The chimney breast may be stepped
back at the shelf height to form a narrow stone ledge,
or the breast left without any shelf. Many simple
variations with the informal brick chimney breast
will occur to everyone. In general, with these
summer shacks or bungalows, the fireplace is the chief
architectural feature of the living-room and for that
reason will stand a moderate amount of embellishment,
but this latter should take the form of a slightly
better finish of the materials used throughout the
room rather than the introduction of more elaborate
and costly ones.