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There are many different ways to arrange bricks in a wall. The different arrangement are called "bonds". A brick arranged along a wall is called a "stretcher"; one laid across a wall is a "header". The gable front of a shop in Epsom High Street, showing the decorative use of different kinds of tiling. Compare this to most modern shops. One of many designs of hanging tiles producing a hexagonal pattern.
Flemish bond brickwork. Alternating headers (Short side showing) and Stretchers (long side showing) in each course of bricks. A modern wall with only stretchers. This arrangement of bricks is know as stretcher bond. An old boundary wall in Epsom, Surrey. Possibly intended to be English bond - courses of stretchers alternating with courses of headers, but not quite making it!
Mike Freedman Mike Freedman Mike Freedman Mike Freedman Mike Freedman
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Buildings often give us clues about the way they have been altered. This building at the Coalport Museum in Shropshire shows that there was once an extension that has now been knocked down. You can see the outline of the roof and the filled in doorway. At various times in history it has been fashionable to include patterns in the brickwork of domestic and civic buildings. These houses in Reading, with their patterned brickwork, were built during Victorian times.    
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This page was last updated on 26 October 2007