The strange part is the locking door. I agree, it's most recent purpose was likely tool base. Not sure what it's original purpose was. I guess it could have been industrial use and they wanted to keep the line staff out of the danger compartment.
Did you pull bricks from various batches as you were going? Colours never match perfectly. Whether doing hardwood, brick, stone, whatever, it's a pain but try to pull from at least three batches/boxes/layers on skid at all times. More sources are better as they make the variations more random throughout the wall.
While real masons may shudder at this technique, I do it wearing Nitrile/Grease Monkey gloves I use a float or hawk to hold the mortar and my fingers to push it in. Replace gloves as they fail. Go back and finish it with the tools afterwards.
When I had my house repointed, they used what looks like large icing bags, but also this technique for some area's. This was after some of the mortar was ground out.
From there they used a repointing tool, like this one.
Then ran a broom over it for texture.
Scoop your mortar on a bricklayer's trowel, then slap the trowel like you would if you're laying blocks. Slappin the trowel firms up the mortar making it easier to handle and not as runny and sticky to brick faces. Take the mortar from the brick trowel to your pointing trowel.
Much easier to point as it's drier and not runny. Also much easier to clean off the brick faces.
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