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*Using the modern grapevine jointer in brickwork is a form of what
is also called "bastard pointing" whereby the genuine article
which is being attempted to be copied is actually the ruled key and tuck
point where the bed mortar receives a keyway into the first infill and
then later tucked with usually a white or red colored lime putty. This
"tuck pointing" was done to give a more formal, (gauged) appearance
to a hand molded and irregular sized brick or irregular rubble, and a
snecked rubble, stone wall. Bastard pointing in stonework is found in
the forms of Ruled Ribbon jointing and further by Cobweb Ribbon jointing
in both cases by the Raised Ribbon where material is added or raised to
the base infill and not into a keyway first incised. It is also found
in the form of Painted Ribbon where whitewash is used for the painted
highlight lines in white, graphite black, etc. to create contrast.

Pencylling on both brick and stone joints is a form of trompe l'oeil where
these colored limes are painted in straight thin lines on the joint. It
really is a faux finish to what originally was genuinely designed to have
depth and body to an infill material that would last longer as it wore
away. New (colonial style) brick buildings, and reproductions of the same
at historic sites, often get what is also called a Colonial style "grapevine
jointing" the brickwork. This style is often being copied from the
original buildings in which the remnant of the style hardly remains evident
in regard to the in-fill of colored lime putty. It is often by an oversight,
or by a new interpretation of only what is desired from what remains of
the original style that the contrasting infill is not included in the
new work. This oversight has happened to the degree that a new style all
its own has been created, AKA the grapevine jointing in brickwork. Thus,
now all repointing is often generically referred to as tuck pointing from
the original meaning to tuck in the colored putty within the center of
an incised joint. The grapevine joint in brickwork is now made with a
jointer which makes a center impression which is close to straight, but
not at all as straight as when using a rule to guide the impression. In
nature a real grape vine would never normally grow in straight lines or
be incised, unless you are pulling a grapevine out of a building's mortar.
Therefore it is just the grapevine joint in stonework which remains true
to its name as a convex protrusion. In brickwork, the grapevine joint
is a style of modern times. In brickwork a convex protrusion is called
a beaded joint. |

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A
very authentic historic style of pointing whereby a squared appearance
is given to snecked rubble work is the Overhung Ridge joint. Snecked
rubble is stonework cut in semi-squared blocks of stone laid in
level, uniform coursing. Snecked rubble is sometimes wrongly referred
to as Ashlar work. Ashlar work is actually perfectly squared blocks
of stone, whether they be actually squares or rectangles, with very
tight, (usually less than ¼) joinery. The Overhung Ridge joint is
often misinterpreted as one of the ribbon joints mentioned above.
Overhung Ridge is a joint that meets the flush face of the semi-squared
block of stone above it, having a trailing edge to the stone above
it and a ruled edge with a inward bevel meeting to the stone below
it. Usually the left side of the head joint has the trailing edge
and the right side of the head joint, the ruled edge with bevel.
Ecologic™ Mortar G #DGM 250 (greenish ochre-brown
colored)
Tools- 1/2" ribbon jointer, loop and a level |
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Overhung
Ridge Joint |
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Note that often in Overhung Ridge pointing of snecked rubble stonework,
the head joints can be perfectly perpendicular with the horizontally level
bed joints or the head joints are angled from the level bedding plane.
From a distance this joint appears to make the semi-squared stones seem
more squarely shaped. It also makes the joints look a lot like a ribbon
joint, which they are not. Although no painted lime lines or additionally
material is added on the surface of the ruled lines, the tightly compressed
flat area of the Overhung Ridge joint typically dries lighter than the
trailing and ruled edge which is scraped away to bleed into the surrounding
texture of stone. This gives the appearance of a painted ribbon joint,
but is not to say that in some instances pencylling was not still carried
out. In Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia many original Overhung Ridge pointed
buildings throughout Germantown Avenue and all the surrounding side streets
can still be viewed.
**Beveled
Ridge is also known in various areas as a Beveled Ridge, Colonial
Ridge, Inverted-V, V, Beaked, Peaked, Prism, Crown Ridge or as a Pointed
joint along with other regional terms for the same thing. The term for
placing mortar between any irregularly shaped stone or brick where the
mortared sides of the squared unit and/or bed was not first buttered with
mortar and then dipped on to its bed is called pointing or it is called
repointing when it is renewed. An actually pointed joint, which comes
to a peak in the center best describes the most functional shape for mortar
placed between irregular sized, random laid rubble stonework because the
protrusion of the mortar allows for more material to be weathered away
than any joint which is struck back. It also happens that rain coming
at an angle toward the building would deflect away from the wall when
the force of the rain hits a beveled edge and bounces away. Finally, in
randomly laid rubble stonework where the mosaic-like pieces of stone come
together to form one unified wall, a hand struck Beveled Ridge joint follows
the contours of the stones’ joinery. This allows the size of each
bevel to conform with the opening which it fills. This is aesthetically
pleasing and is further improved in aesthetic quality when sunlight casts
shadows on the lower half of the bevel making wide joints appear half
their size. So, the terms Pointing and to Repoint may have remained because
of the shape that mortar for this type of stonework was originally designed
to have. |
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Surface
pointing,
(also known as a "scrub joint" ) is commonly applied as
a pasted joint with little depth of material. It is in fact the
most common method of "repointing" a whole building but
contributes very little. In fact many times this method accelerates
deterioration by trapping water in the wall with high concentrations
of Portland cement in the mix used.
Many
"Restoration masons" utilize this method because pasting
over the top of slightly recessed joints with a thin overlay goes
up very quickly and gives the appearance of a lot of work received
for what is a small amount of money charged for the work. In the
end, the less savvy building owner thinks that since the entire wall
has been "repointed" and the uniform look of all joints being
filled is a complete job they received a good value. |
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What
actually has happened is that the joint profile is not restored to a tooling
within the edges of the brickwork but instead is now a flat joint on the
faces of the brickwork much wider than the original joint profile.
The
fineness of Portland cement and fine play sand made in a 1:1 ratio with
little or no lime content is what makes this fine paste. The brittle,
often gray Portland cement colored, scrub joint cracks and falls out within
a few years.
Where
it does not fall out and was filled into deeper voids it helps to keep
moisture trapped in the bedding mortar and only allows any moisture in
the wall to escape through the face of the masonry unit, if it were to
get out at all. A resulting "picture frame" of proud gray mortar
remains with hollowed back masonry units as the final irreversible damage.
"Tuck pointing" is what some inappropriately call the scrub
joint. The scrub joint is very similar to grouting the face of tile although
the scrub joint is applied course by course on the brick joints. The actual
root of the name "Tuck pointing" comes from a narrow keyway
cut into the center of a molded brick joint and then filled or "tucked"
with a bright white, red or black lime putty to give a more formal and
gauged appearance to the brickwork. Prior
to the tucking in of this lime putty a red color wash is first applied
to the bricks and mortar joints to give uniformity and aid as a shelter
coat. Remnants of this color wash and infill of putty can be found on
many historic brick buildings in the eastern states. The "grapevine
joint" has taken the place for the name of a true ruled key and tucked
joint and what is often reproduced in a restoration effort is simply the
grapevine joint without the proper color wash and lime putty in-fill. |
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| Example
of stone-filled framing often found in early house construction.
This is not how the interior walls were intended to remain. Owners in later
years took off the interior plaster and exposed the brick or stone-filled
framing and pointed up the work. This cobweb ribbon style mortar joint is
considered a bastard pointing. It was not achieved by white
material placed over gray background mortar nor was it painted on white
lines. Simply by compressing the wet mortar in the center and scraping away
and leaving an open texture to the feathered edges of the mortar did the
centerline dry whiter and more prominent. |
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example of how the exterior plaster used to cover the rubble fieldstone
foundation was lined-out to look like cut blocks of stone. The
exterior plaster render above it is harling. A type of plaster harled
(literally hurled) at the wall while wet. The English call it Rough Cast and the Scots call it Harling. |
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| An
example of squirrel tail bake oven underside: Slates were used for the underside
of a bake oven again arranged in the same successful pattern. Slate was
an available local stone in the area of PA were this photo was taken. |
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Small
cullets of colorful glass galleted or embedded into wet render, (or in this
case on concrete), is an enrichment or embellished effect of tessarae work. |
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The
"grapevine" joint in stonework is a protruded bead. Easton,
PA
Note to those in College Hill and the Easton, PA area-
1 part Ecologic™ Mortar G #DGM 200 (brown/grayish color) and
1/4
part washed coal flecks, (or medium grade slag bits), is a good match for most mortar
repointing work needed on buildings built there before 1940.
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The
"beaded joint" in this brickwork is a protruded bead. Annapolis,
MD |
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sheets from late 1800's into early 1900's meant to reproduce the work of
early brick masons correctly interpreted a detailing that was found in most
all old brickwork where some detail, whether a bead or a tucked-joint ribbon
or a slight raised "V" from cutting the lime mortar usually
was the finished profile. Today a concave, 1/2 round, striking is commonly done to
cement mortars so that they are tightly compressed using a convex or "bucket"
jointer. Unlike lime mortars, which allow absorption and evaporation of
all water, modern Portland cement joints must keep water out by being tightly
compressed. |
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Find
the original whitewash on a building and you will often see bluing. Ultra
Marine Blue was added as well as other types of bluing pigments to help
a not so white lime wash to become whiter. I have heard tales of superstitions
about putting blue in the whitewash but I don't have substantial information
to offer about whether they have any truth to the tales or not. A very white whitewash helped to increase moonlight reflection and often one can see plaster remaining over the brick or stone under a front porch for this very reason. |
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| Example
of "brick-filled framing" often found in early house construction. |
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Example
using over-burned "clinker brick" which twists out of shape from
over firing and then laid in a wall as a decorative form of brickwork called
"skintled" brickwork. |
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A
pent roof was removed from a rubble fieldstone farmhouse in Pennsylvania
and the owner's who did this work showed me this beautiful original lime
plaster which was "lined-out" to look like cut ashlar blocks of
stone. For some reason we often see these blocks scribed around 26-27"
long and 9" high. We have also measured many other variations but the
26 x 9 is common. |
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You
know that you are dealing with historic fabric when you see greater detail
in the use of lime/sand mortars. Above are down-draft kiln fired red brick
with a pigmented red lime mortar. The black painted ribbon joint
found on the stonework was originally installed to create a more formal
appearance of gauged joinery. This creates contrast between the stone and
the colors of the brick above it. Ask for Ecologic™ #DGM Black mortar |
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Another
couple of examples of "lining out" where incised lines were scored
into wet lime/sand exterior plaster to simulate brick and their joints.
Although the mosaic of rubble fieldstone is considered a desirable thing
of beauty today, it was more a sign of affluence to have had brick made
and delivered to a building site rather that using scrap fieldstone laid
up in a rubble wall. So, the shelter coat of lime/sand plaster was often
embellished with lining-out to create something more sophisticated such
as cut blocks of stone or expensive bricks. |
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I
would love someone to tell me what this is. A 250 year old threshold stone
made of granite had an inlaid area. However, nothing was inlaid. The imprint
of a center "mat-like" area is actually the original stone with
only a vermiculated center area tooled in, as if to catch dirt. Something
may have been poured in to the crevices and sat up on top of the stone but
it is now worn completely away. Montgomery County, PA. |
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| Another
example of Pencylling. Cut blocks of sandstone were color washed and pencylled-in
with a ruled black line to give the appearance of even a closer tolerance
to the stonework's joinery. The white part of the mortar would have been
stained the uniform color applied to all of the stonework's faces and joints
except for the prominent black line. |
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