The Touchstone Chesmont is the design-forward pick: a 50-inch wall-hanging fireplace with a floating mantel and a genuine three-sided flame view that wraps around the front and both sides. It carries six flame colors and a 10-color media bed, plus the same smart-home control as Touchstone's Sideline line. It is supplemental heat (about 400 sq ft) and the mantel makes it a statement piece rather than a disappear-into-the-wall unit, but for a focal-point install it looks the part.

Full review
Real-World Performance
The Chesmont runs a 1,500W heater (with a 750W low setting) rated at 5,118 BTU, which Touchstone positions for supplemental heating of roughly 400 square feet. As with the rest of the lineup, this is warmth for a single room on a cool evening, not a primary heat source. Owners on Touchstone's product page describe it warming a living room 'fantastically,' but the spec sheet is clear that it is designed to raise a room's temperature a few degrees rather than heat a home.
Where the Chesmont earns its keep is the flame presentation. The three-sided viewing area pushes light out the front and both sides, so the fire is visible from more angles than a standard flat wall unit - a meaningful difference when the fireplace sits on a wall you pass by rather than face head-on.
The two-stage 750W/1500W heater is thermostatically controlled and, like the Sideline, runs independently of the flame, so the Chesmont can throw a few degrees of warmth on a cool evening or simply glow without heat in summer. The wider six-color flame palette gives it more visual flexibility than the Sideline's three colors, and the wraparound glass means the light spills into the room from the sides as well as the front, which reads as cozier in an open living space.
Build Quality and Design
The defining feature is the floating-mantel, three-sided design. The flame is framed on the front and both sides by a sleek mantel that gives the unit a furniture-like presence, which is the opposite design philosophy from the flush recessed Sideline. Touchstone offers it in black (model 80034) and white (80033) mantel finishes to match different rooms.
It ships with both a driftwood log set and fire-glass crystals, so the media can be tuned warm or modern. At 62 pounds it is heavier and bulkier to mount than a simple insert, and the wall-hanging design makes it a deliberate focal point rather than something that blends in. Owners repeatedly describe the install as straightforward via the included wall bracket.
The mantel is finished on all visible faces, which is what allows the three-sided glass to wrap the flame, and Touchstone sizes the unit so the mantel reads as a built-in shelf rather than an afterthought. The black (80034) and white (80033) options let it match either a dark accent wall or a bright modern room, and reviewers consistently describe the result as looking more expensive than it is - the mantel-and-wraparound combination is the detail that elevates it above a plain flat panel.
What Reviewers Loved
Reviewers gravitate to the looks. Modern Blaze's expert writeup lists 'realistic flames, looks great, modern chic, elegant, easy to install, produces good heat' as the standout positives, and Touchstone's own buyers echo it - one calling the 'build and ambiance' simply 'EXCELLENT.' The unit averages 4.5 stars on the manufacturer site and 4.9 in Modern Blaze's tracking, with the design and the wraparound flame drawing the most praise.
The smart-home control is the other recurring positive: the Chesmont uses the same Wi-Fi platform as the Sideline, so Alexa, Google Home, the Touchstone app, and the remote all work, and the six-color flame menu gives it more visual range than the three-color Sideline.
Where It Falls Short
The Chesmont's heater is the same supplemental-only proposition as the rest of the category - about 400 square feet - so it will not warm a large open space. The wall-hanging mantel that makes it a statement piece is also a drawback for anyone who wanted a fireplace to disappear into a media wall; the recessed Sideline is the better choice there.
It is also one of the heavier and pricier wall units here. At around $549 and 62 pounds, mounting takes more effort than a slim insert, and budget shoppers can get similar smart features from the Westinghouse 50 for far less, albeit without the three-sided view or the mantel.
How It Compares to Alternatives
Within the Touchstone family, the Chesmont is the design statement and the Sideline 50 is the clean built-in. They share the smart platform and independent flame/heat control, but the Chesmont's floating mantel and three-sided view make it a focal point while the Sideline aims to be flush and discreet.
Against the budget Westinghouse 50, the Chesmont is pricier but more substantial and better-styled. Against the Dimplex Revillusion RLG25, it is a wall fireplace rather than a firebox insert, so the comparison is really about whether you want a wall-mounted design piece or a retrofit for an existing firebox.
The Chesmont's clearest edge over everything else here is presentation: the three-sided view and floating mantel make it the unit you choose when the fireplace is meant to be admired, not hidden. If your priority is the cleanest possible built-in or the lowest price, the Sideline and Westinghouse respectively make more sense, but neither matches the Chesmont's furniture-like presence on the wall.
Value at This Price
At around $549 the Chesmont sits between the Sideline and the budget Westinghouse, and its value rests on design rather than raw specs. You are paying for the three-sided wraparound view and the floating mantel - features that make it look like a piece of furniture rather than a wall appliance. For a focal-point install where the fireplace is meant to be seen and admired, that styling premium is justified; for pure heat-per-dollar it is not.
The package includes both driftwood and crystal media and the full Touchstone smart platform, so like the Sideline it avoids forcing add-on purchases. Buyers cross-shopping the Westinghouse will find the Chesmont costs more and offers fewer flame colors, but the Westinghouse cannot match the three-sided presentation or the mantel. The Chesmont's value is highest for design-led buyers and lowest for spec-sheet shoppers.
Long-Term Reliability
The Chesmont shares Touchstone's established platform and the same LED flame and ceramic heater used across the brand's lineup, so it inherits the company's solid reliability reputation. The 4.5-star manufacturer average and the consistently positive Modern Blaze tracking come from owners who have lived with the unit, and the smart features run on the same app and firmware as the heavily-reviewed Sideline.
The main long-term consideration is the mount: at 62 pounds the wall-hanging design needs secure anchoring, and the three-sided glass is a larger surface to keep clean than a flat front. Owners do not report widespread failures, and the independent flame/heat operation reduces wear on the heating element since the flame can run alone. For a design-forward wall unit, it is as dependable as the rest of the Touchstone range.
Who It's Best For
Choose the Chesmont if you want the fireplace to be a visible centerpiece - a floating-mantel, three-sided unit that looks like furniture and shows the flame from multiple angles. It suits a feature wall in a living room or a primary bedroom where the look matters as much as the warmth, and where the fireplace will be viewed from more than just straight on.
Pass on it if you prefer a flush recessed install (get the Sideline), if you need to heat a large room, or if you want the same smart features for less money and can live without the mantel and wraparound view (the Westinghouse 50 covers that). It is also heavier to mount than a slim insert, so weigh the install effort against the design payoff.
Strengths
- +Three-sided design with front and side viewing framed by a floating mantel for a furniture-like look
- +Six flame colors, 10 media-bed colors, five intensity levels and three flame speeds
- +Heat and flames operate independently for year-round ambiance
- +Wi-Fi with Alexa, Google Home, app and remote control
- +Ships with both driftwood and crystal ember media sets
Watch-outs
- −1,500W / 5,118 BTU heater is supplemental only, rated near 400 sq ft
- −Wall-hanging mantel design is more visually prominent than a flush recessed unit
- −Heavier (62 lb) and bulkier to mount than a simple insert
- −Premium price relative to budget wall fireplaces
How it compares
Shares Touchstone's smart-home platform and independent flame/heat control with the Sideline 50, but trades the Sideline's flush recessed fit for a three-sided wall-hanging mantel and a wider flame view; it is more of a focal point than the Westinghouse 50 and pricier, and unlike the Dimplex Revillusion RLG25 it is a wall unit rather than a firebox insert.
Who this is for
At a glance: buyers who want the fireplace to be a design statement, with a floating mantel and wraparound three-sided flame view.
Why you’d buy the Touchstone Chesmont 50"
- Three-sided design with front and side viewing framed by a floating mantel for a furniture-like look.
- Six flame colors, 10 media-bed colors, five intensity levels and three flame speeds.
- Heat and flames operate independently for year-round ambiance.
Why you’d skip it
- 1,500W / 5,118 BTU heater is supplemental only, rated near 400 sq ft.
- Wall-hanging mantel design is more visually prominent than a flush recessed unit.
- Heavier (62 lb) and bulkier to mount than a simple insert.
Rating sources
“The build and ambiance the Chesmont provides is EXCELLENT! It added the last touch I was looking for in my bedroom.”
“Realistic flames, looks great, modern chic, elegant, easy to install, produces good heat.”
“Wall-hanging 3-sided fireplace with a 50-inch floating mantel, 6 flame colors and a 1,500W heater, rated highly by owners for build and ambiance.”
Our 4.6 score is the average of these published ratings. Ratings marked * were derived from the reviewer’s written analysis or video transcript — the publisher didn’t print an explicit numeric score, so we inferred one from their own words. Click through to verify. More about methodology.



