I agree.Its a very friendly product but I had an enquiry which they needed a sample for my colour match. I chipped off some stone work and sent it off. when it came back I did think that it looked a different shade but hey what do I know!
Having gauged it up and applied it still thinking it might dry in to match I left the job.Had a call back to find it looked like a sore thumb sticking out.
I phoned up the manufacturer and said what was the problem.
He needed yet another sample to match up.
Clock was now running and my good name & the price was looking grim.
It came back later than promised and still not the colour match as promised.
They refunded me but be we're of this as the house which I was working on was in the £11 million bracket and it cost me a gd job which the material failed and let me down
For now artisans
Gazzer63
Hi Gazzer, using 1 colour, either matched or a shelf colour will almost always stick out like a sore thumb next to weathered stone. We either finish the Litho as a new repair, colours depending on the stonework next to it, or more often age it ourselves. Hiding Lithomex repairs on a carbon stained sandstone building is very easy to do.
Always go darker in colour than you may initially think as factors such as how you dress the finish / lime bloom / weather conditions will always lighten the colour.
Don't finish ashlar faces surface with a trowel / sponge /wood like render or it will look just like render.
Silicone carbide block then finer sandpaper while still green(following day)
Try to go as close to the surrounding stone's colours - then age it using pigment / tooling etc
There's a few issues we've come across with Lithomex, but they are mainly bossing/blooming.
Trouble with stone restoration is
Masons: Crap plastering / trowelling skills
Plasterers: Used to working with wet mortar, no stone tooling skills when the material sets hard, - this is where Lithomex is made to look like stone
Hope this helps mate