Dear Guys,
Now that you have all helped me to get my roof fixed, I am turning my attention to my indoor problems.
I have a ranch style house, that is only 24 feet wide. An interior load bearing wall runs right down the center of it. On one side of this wall is a 3 foot hall way. On the other side of this wall, the fireplace sits, with the rear of the fireplace against the wall, and front of the fireplace and hearth facing outward into my "living room."
Because the fireplace is four feet wide (along its sides) and there is a brick hearth sticking out 18 inches in front of the face of the fireplace, the fireplace and hearth jut out five and a half feet into my living room. Since the living room was only thirteen and a half feet wide to begin with (being the distance between the front of the load bearing wall and the inside face of the front wall of the house itself), this leaves barely eight feet of width to my living room.
The fireplace and hearth are a nice red brick, mixed colors, and nicely tucked. But they stick out right there in the living room like a big red elephant in your lap. The floors are beautifully finished yellow pine, random width, high gloss. People often remark, after looking at my living room, that my house looks more like a cabin than a house. (Not the look I'm really going for.)
Another factor is that the prior owners had lots of big time fires in the fireplace, with a very cheap brass front and glass. As a result, there is an area of about a foot above the fireplace opening, where the red brick is stained with soot and scorch marks.
I am thinking that maybe, I should just yank out the old fireplace insert, take a wire brush and scrub the top layer of the soot and scorch marks off the face of the bricks, and them paint the whole fireplace and hearth white, or off-white. This would make the thing blend backwards, more like part of the wall, and not dominate the small living room. I would then install one of the fake electric fireplace units, that has the fake flames. No more real fires.
Has anybody ever painted a fireplace before? Is there a special paint? Any big do's and don'ts? I guess I'll have to cap off the flues at the top of the chimney with sheet aluminum, so that no more rain or moisture comes down the chimney and leeches through the face of the brick?
I know that once its painted, its forever and that I can never go back to the red brick. But that is OK.
I am trying to go for an "English Country House" look, with small rooms, colonial colors, and chair-railing. Not a weekend cabin look.
As always, thanks for all comments and advice.
Mannyrock