This TikTok Chimney Sweep Tells Why You Shouldn’t Paint A Fireplace

Austin reacts while the woman goes through her process, stressing that the caulking she uses is for the tiles and not safe to be near a fireplace, and that the paint she uses is not a frenace primer. “Looking at people to paint their chimneys physically uncomfortable,” he says as he observes.
Then the original poster retaliated, responding to commentators on his video and apparently shading Austin himself. “I have received a lot of comments from the uniform of” experts “telling me that I should not have painted him because the fireplace will become so hot, it will create toxic smoke,” she said in a refutation video. She then uses a Thermometer to show that the bricks Near the fireplace, I have not heated to the maximum safety limit for paint, which is 200 degrees. (She did not respond to Buzzfeed News DMS requesting comments.)
So who is right?
Russ Dimmitt, director of education at the Chimney Safety Institute of America, the certification body for fireplace swings, says that painting on a fireplace is almost never safe, but its main concern is the humidity trapping painting and damaging the brick. “As an industry, we recommend painting brick as a practice due to the potential to cause problems with the longevity of brick and mortar,” he told Buzzfeed News.
Seeing the increase in the popularity of painted chimneys has so much concerned that it has reached out to television DIY programs to try to alert them problems. “They said,” It’s television, don’t worry “,” he recalls.
However, not all building professionals consider a painted fireplace as a serious disaster. Austin Jenkins, an inspector of houses in Tennessee who gives advice on Tiktok as Inspector AJtold Buzzfeed News: “Painting a fireplace is relatively safe.” He added: “I mean, I painted My Fireplace, if that says something. “He pointed out that an international building code which specifies that there should be nothing of fuel within 6 inches of the opening of the household probably refers more to wooden garnishes and other materials, rather than painting.
Austin is not a hardliner when it comes to painting your fireplace. He simply pointed out that if you do, you should not use latex paint (which is, at a temperature, fuel). “If they want to paint it, I recommend a earth -based pigment like lime washing, something that is not fuel,” said Austin. “The other option is to use furnace paint or high storm paint. It is not fuel up to 1,200 degrees. ”
Indeed, he has due to videos of house fins that have used furnace paint and received his approval seal.