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Alexander Fireplace Mantels |
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Alexander with Overmantel |
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Alexander fireplace mantel is a strikingly gorgeous design. For folks who really like dental moldings this is a smart choice. The smaller beads going down the legs give a nice pillar design. You can order a nice over mantel to match Fireplace mantel. This fireplace mantel is available in paintgrade only. |
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Lower Your Fuel Bills by Boosting the Heat-Output of Your
Fireplace |
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Written by: Susan PenneyWeb Site: FireplaceMall.com Date Submitted: 01/29/2005 |
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For some people, a fireplace might as well be a video of flaming
logs. Their primary interest is the welcoming ambiance a fireplace’s
blaze presents. If, however, you expect your fireplace to provide heat
in exchange for your log-carrying, fire-building efforts, (or in the
case of gas logs, in exchange for your gas bill), it’s time to
maximize your fireplace’s heat output.
There are various contraptions designed to return more of a wood or
gas fireplace’s heat into the room and stanch the flow of that
precious heat from escaping up the chimney. Many of them involve fans
and vents and considerable expense. But one of the most time-honored,
hassle-free, and least expensive methods of increasing a fire’s heat
output is making a comeback: the fireback.
A fireback is a sheet of metal, sized in proportion to the fireplace,
that’s placed against your back fireplace wall. Firebacks can be set
on the hearth’s floor and just leaned against the back fireplace
wall, but often they are secured by placing them in supporting braces
which keep the fireback from sliding. Firebacks come in two main
styles: the cast iron fireback and the stainless steel fireback.
The traditional cast iron fireback, popular in earlier times and
making a revival now, is a sheet of heavy, black, cast iron. Often
they are cast with a design, such as a fleur de lis or eagle, to add a
decorative touch to this functional fireplace accessory.
The cast iron firebacks work on the same principle as heating
radiators. The metal is heated (by hot water in the case of radiators
and by the fire in the case of firebacks), and then that heat is
radiated into the room.
Although attractive and functional, the cast-iron firebacks are too
heavy for many people to manage easily. Their weight also adds to
their shipping costs, and therefore to their total price.
A more modern fireback design, one that is growing in popularity, is
made of a sheet of very gently curved, tempered stainless steel. These
stainless steel firebacks warm your room in two ways. First, like the
cast iron firebacks, they radiate the heat of the fire forward into
the room. But they also reflect the heat, as well as the light, of the
fire into the room.
Stainless steel firebacks weigh only one-sixth as much as a similarly
sized cast iron fireback, so they are easier to manage and less costly
to ship. But their main appeal may be their price: They cost only a
fraction as much as their cast iron cousins. Whereas a cast iron
fireback, depending on size, can cost $250 to $700, the stainless
steel versions usually go for $50 to $150.
Both cast iron and stainless steel firebacks dramatically increase the
room-warming capacity of your wood or gas fireplace fire. The addition
of this simple fireplace accessory to your hearth can mean warmer toes
and lower heating bills.
*****Susan Penney appreciates simple ways to make our homes renewing
spaces for our families. She invites you to visit
Fireplace Mantels JAGetzCo