Does this sound feasible and\or will this look stupid?
Thank for the advise.....
Chris
Bah, humbug. Check some of the DIY links, they're doing stuff like
that all the time. All you've gotta do really is decide what you want,
and take it slow and easy to make sure it looks neat, and all t he same.
Your money, your house, your doors, you're the one's gotta live with the
results. I wouldn' hesitate a minute.
JOAT
When in doubt, go to sleep.
- Mully Small
Try the inside of a closet door to see how you like the look. It's
done all the time with decorative moulding simulating panels below
wainscoting. But folks are not used to seeing real panels there, so
it might be easier to get away with. Everyone is used to seeing panel
doors, so a "fake" (other than molded plastic fakes) may stand out.
If you do much more than simple picture-frame mold, you need to
seriously price out your materials versus a cheap molded plastic panel
door. For my taste, I'd avoid the simulated grain (looks like someone
forgot to sand and properly prime before painting), and then paint it
as if it were a real panel door (i.e., panels, then center stiles,
then rails, then outer stiles). I'd be tempted to lightly score where
joints would be to further improve the illusion.
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"Stupid48" <cf_...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
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Do a test, closet door inside maybe, and see how it comes out.
Though I'm inclined to think it won't be a value added project.
A.M. Wood
"bent" <be...@rogers.com> wrote in message
news:11713076...@sp6iad.superfeed.net...
> the (e.g 1/2 x 3/8") trim may end up being expensive esp. if only avail in
> oak. You could buy a 2x4 and use an ogee type bit if you have a TS and
> RT. Compare to doors you have, or doors you will have or like, and a
> pattern, if not depth
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"bent" <be...@rogers.com> wrote in message
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> if not depth
> "bent" <be...@rogers.com> wrote in message
...
>> the (e.g 1/2 x 3/8") trim may end up being expensive esp. if only avail
>> in oak.
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"bent" <be...@rogers.com> wrote in message
news:11713354...@sp6iad.superfeed.net...
> If you wanted real depth, you could use pieces of plywood, hardboard,
> masonite, whiteboard. May get it cheap enough if you plan in, and you are
> painting.
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It's very feasible, and even pretty easy if you're careful.
Looking stupid is another matter entirely, and is up to your personal
taste.
I've had to do this in the past for customers at their request, and it
generally doesn't look all that bad. Since you're apply wood to the
surface, it's not a bad idea to think about ideas that you wouldn't
normally see on the doors in question, like making some sort of
geometric grid with 1/4" strips that are jointed togther before
application rather than simple wooden panels with a routed edge.
Another idea is to add not only the raised panels, but to also add a
thin raised border around the edge that matches the profile of the
panels.
Or, and I like this idea better, you could just make new doors- it's
not as big of a hardship with interior doors, as you don't have
different temperature and humidity levels on opposide sides, the way
you do with an exterior door.
All true statements. Your house, your money, your life. And it
*still* looks like crap. There's no way to make a silk purse from a
sow's ear.