
9 June 2019 | 6 replies
One thing you could do is use S mortar or something similar with a brushed texture to go over the top of the faux brick if it's structurally sound, and then get artistic with a sponge with a row on the bottom (all along the front, under the windows, etc) , to give those bricks a nice natural tone/look (tans, greys, with multiple passes with dabbing with a sponge) might give you a really nice look.This is all if the brick is structurally sound, of course.

10 April 2017 | 15 replies
I did everything myself aside from the staining - better half was an art major in college and is much better than me with a brush.

3 January 2015 | 19 replies
If your brush hits it, oh well it blends right in.

29 October 2016 | 18 replies
Awesome stuff, very easy to roll or brush on with no streaks.

7 September 2010 | 28 replies
Cabinets can be especially difficult as the different grains in the wood and the frames themselves can make the brush marks stand out.

17 August 2017 | 4 replies
You can dramatically change a bathroom by going from brushed nickel to oil rubbed bronze or like the picture in your example, gold to any other finish easily later on.Some ideas I personally have done and love:Heated floors.

9 April 2015 | 22 replies
So far we've taken all the wood off the top (underside) of the porch and replaced it with tongue and grove pine and replaced the single ugly exterior light with 3 brushed steel pot lights attached to a dimmer.

31 July 2017 | 6 replies
I know a lot of accountants that can't use a tooth brush, let alone a paint brush.

22 March 2016 | 9 replies
(check comps, expectations for area first, i'm up north snow area....)bathrooms, get rid of anything gold. chrome/brushed steel/nickel... maybe modern but you want serene/calm/spa. choose paint color wise.kitchen: there seems to be a mix of black can painted plastic and metal pulls. how are the cabinets?

17 December 2014 | 18 replies
Hopefully you've been brushing up on learning MFRs via BP blogs and such, right?!