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Thread: Backing for Glass Splashback
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13th November 2006, 06:55 PM #16
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13th November 2006, 08:39 PM #17
Glass guys use silicon to glue splashbacks to walls.
What is the diff in high/low spots? 5-10mm?
If so, some big globs of silicon at regular intervals should do the trick.
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13th November 2006, 08:44 PM #18
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13th November 2006, 08:47 PM #19
What colour glass are you having?
To stop the shadowing how about painting the wall behind the glass matt black?
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13th November 2006, 08:49 PM #20
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13th November 2006, 08:51 PM #21
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13th November 2006, 09:08 PM #22
VG I thought you were talking rough those wall are fine.
As far a shadows go unless you have some opaque finish how can you see through painted glass??
Any how I agree with Renomart, paint the wall if that is what it takes to satisfy the glass people.. but I still can imagine how you could get shadow through a solid paint finish.
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13th November 2006, 09:11 PM #23
My wife can see through me.
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13th November 2006, 09:24 PM #24
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13th November 2006, 09:30 PM #25
My folks are in the process of getting a splashback done.
The glass people who came out to measure suggested painting the wall the same colour as the finish on the glass.
If it dosen't fit perfectly on the edges it's not as noticable.Cheers
DJ
ADMIN
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13th November 2006, 09:39 PM #26
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13th November 2006, 09:58 PM #27
When we were exploring the glass splashback option, I sensed a great deal of "nervousness" amongst a few of the businesses approached. When pressed about this, the general reply was that the "glass supplier" seemed to have earned a reputation for stuffing up. ie. cutouts wrong place/size. Ours was ordered, painted locally and when our supplier did a final check on powerpoint cutouts, realised that they had been cut to the outside dimensions of the cover plate. This seems to be a common occurance & perhaps explains why some of the qotes we got were, to say the least, out of control - they didn't want the hassle. 4 weeks later, we had our splashback fitted.
It looks great. By the way, we fitted villaboard behind onto studs & painted it the same colour as the glass. I agree with Bleedin - that with opaque paint, I doubt that light would get behind to show up your less that perfect backing.
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13th November 2006, 10:44 PM #28
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14th November 2006, 08:20 AM #29
Likewise on comments on cost, we fitted glass splashbacks to the wall and a bay window that sits in front of the sink. There was problems with the bay even though we had MDF templates to go off first time mistakes had been made on size and the second size was right but some panels had been painted on the wrong side. Third attempt the fit was not prefect but satisfactory the whole lot took us twelve months and in the end we became quite used to bare plaster splash backs although visitors must of thought it was a bit rough. We fixed the glass to paper gyprock with skim coat patches from where tiles had been removed and there is no shadowing from the back ground FWIW. We are very happy with the outcome, and would never go back to tiles and grout.
John.
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14th November 2006, 10:40 AM #30
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