Faux Concrete Tabletop Fireplace

9 Materials
$60
2 Days
Easy

Please take a minute to click here to sign up for the Mother Daughter Projects weekly newsletter. You'll get notification about our new projects and what is up and coming.


The humble supplies below came together into one of our favorite projects ever! When we spotted those flame light bulbs- we just knew we had to do something with them. At the time of purchase, we had no idea what to do with them, we just knew we had to use them!

With a little bit of engineering, styrofoam, melamine, toy bricks, and Quikrete mortar mix, we were able to cast the perfect faux fireplace! Take a look at how it came together.

Watch the video to see it come together!


Want to see our latest projects? Sign-up for our weekly newsletter    here!

Those bulbs came first, but how to power them? We realized we could wire a plug onto a cheap vanity fixture to use as the power base for our bulbs. After testing the idea and it worked, we then moved onto designing and building the mold for the mortar mix.

The mold was constructed with faux Duplo bricks, styrofoam, and a piece of plastic tubing all glued into place on a piece of melamine. We are using a Surebonder hot glue gun with a continuous roll of glue! It's so convenient not to have to keep changing out individual glue sticks. The dried hot glue does not stick to the finished mortar so it's perfect to use.

We are using Quikrete mortar mix in a 40 pound bag. We ended up using about half the bag mixed up in three batches. We added the mix to the bucket, added water and mixed until it was brownie-like consistency. Don't forget your safety gear: gloves, mask, and eye protection.

We actually molded this upside down so what you are looking at is the styrofoam that will create the void in the underside of the "fireplace." Note: If you made the wood base like we did, you don't need to create the bottom void. Just make sure the plastic pipe goes all the way to the bottom.

We covered up the mold and let it cure for 48 hours before unmolding. We gave it extra time due to the cold and damp conditions in the garage.

We started by removing the styrofoam insert. It was messy and tedious but the styrofoam created exactly what we wanted. A shop vac helps to contain all the mess.

This is the test cord as the final one we used was white. The wire is put down through the hole so the light fixture can sit in the concrete flat.

All finished. The concrete "floats" on it's new hardwood base. We used a piece of copper color aluminum so the fireplace would be even more reflective.

We love everything about our tabletop faux fireplace! It all came together as imagined. The only thing I don't like about it, is it's going to live at Steph's house!

Resources for this project:
See all materials
Any price and availability information displayed on [relevant Amazon Site(s), as applicable] at the time of purchase will apply to the purchase of this product.
Hometalk may collect a small share of sales from the links on this page.More info
Mother Daughter Projects
Want more details about this and other DIY projects? Check out my blog post!
Go
Frequently asked questions
Have a question about this project?
Comments
Join the conversation
2 of 14 comments
  • User User on Nov 06, 2019
    Maravilloso !! Gracias ! ❤️
  • Cornelia Major Cornelia Major on Mar 29, 2022

    I will try this with a hypertufa mix and a plastic window planter, the weight is much lighter. Perhaps some white Christmas lights and a couple of split wood pieces on top of the lights.


Next