Exterior Masonry is highly resistant and sturdy, and is exceptionally durable. His formula breathable, waterproof and resistant to fungal contamination can fight against the moisture in the walls, and is resistant to the formation of scales, cracks, chalking, peeling and fading, until 15 years after the application, provided you have applied f...
Exterior Masonry is highly resistant and sturdy, and is exceptionally durable. His formula breathable, waterproof and resistant to fungal contamination can fight against the moisture in the walls, and is resistant to the formation of scales, cracks, chalking, peeling and fading, until 15 years after the application, provided you have applied following the instructions provided in our product information sheets. It dries quickly, in just two hours under normal conditions, and is available in over 100 colors. This product is not suitable for highly alkaline or highly porous surfaces such as lime plaster or Fletton bricks.
Use: All exterior masonry surfaces
Gloss Level: 2%
Environment: minimal VOC content
Maintenance: Waterproof and resistant to fungal contamination. Resistant to delamination, to the formation of cracks, chalking and fading up to 15 years after application.
Drying time: 2 hours
Waiting time between 2 layers: 4:00
Coverage by potted m2 with 2 layers: 20
Stone Blue feels regal and exclusive and really holds its own in any situation.
Cabbage White is the named after the most delicate of butterflies, so is a very fitting name for this equally delicate colour.
Pavilion Blue was inspired by the wonderful Regency colours in the Royal Pavilion in Brighton, although a little lighter in tone.
Green Blue needs no explanation, it is exactly what it says – sometimes blue and sometimes green depending on the light conditions.
Oval Room Blue is the most blackened of our blues, giving it a timeless pared down feel.
This colour was first used at the classic Georgian Inchyra House to work with moody Scottish skies.
Borrowed Light is named after the much desired extra illumination that often comes from a fanlight and really does evoke summer skies.
Skylight, like Borrowed Light is named after the traditional glazed area in ceilings often used to maximize natural light.
Light Blue has a fabulous silvery look to it when used in areas deprived of light so is very popular for use on the walls of internal halls, especially when the remainder of the house is painted in the cooler more neutral greys.
Lulworth Blue has an unsurpassed freshness, typical of a formal mid-tone Regency blue and so happily sits alongside similarly clean Arsenic or Citron.