DPB
31st January 2002, 04:13 PM
I recently installed two sets of double doors in my lounge room. (These were new unpainted doors.) Each door has 10 panes x 2 sides x 4 doors = 80 panes x three coats of paint = 240 paintings x 4 sides/pain = 960 edges to hand cut in the paint.
Well, you can imagine that this task became bigger than Ben Hur and started to drag out much longer than originally intended. (The professional painter quoted $2000 to paint the doors.) I thought that was an awful price before I attempted the job myself. Now I think it is a bargain.
Half way through the job, a builder friend of mine offered me a tip which worked fantastically and enabled me to finish the last half of the job in one quarter of the time the first half took.
I purchased a roll of Contac book covering material and cut panels slightly larger than the window pain and trimed these in with a Stanley Knife flush to the pane edge. I made certain the edges were well sealed by running my finger firmly around the pain.
Now I could paint with abandon. No need to worry about cutting in the edges - just a generous application of enamel paint onto the two base coats. I allowed the enamel to dry for 5 days. Then I cut around the perimeter with the Stanley Knife to cut a clean edge, and removed the Contact.
Perfect job if I do say so myself!
DPB
Well, you can imagine that this task became bigger than Ben Hur and started to drag out much longer than originally intended. (The professional painter quoted $2000 to paint the doors.) I thought that was an awful price before I attempted the job myself. Now I think it is a bargain.
Half way through the job, a builder friend of mine offered me a tip which worked fantastically and enabled me to finish the last half of the job in one quarter of the time the first half took.
I purchased a roll of Contac book covering material and cut panels slightly larger than the window pain and trimed these in with a Stanley Knife flush to the pane edge. I made certain the edges were well sealed by running my finger firmly around the pain.
Now I could paint with abandon. No need to worry about cutting in the edges - just a generous application of enamel paint onto the two base coats. I allowed the enamel to dry for 5 days. Then I cut around the perimeter with the Stanley Knife to cut a clean edge, and removed the Contact.
Perfect job if I do say so myself!
DPB