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kitchen-sink's splashboard is a window. How to protect from water, etc?

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David Combs

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Jun 3, 2011, 1:24:21 AM6/3/11
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Some time ago I asked a similar question, but none of the
suggestions were acceptable to, uh, "she who must be obeyed".

And I forgot to say that the existing splashboard wasn't
just wood, but an actual window, with the usual wood frame,
molding (sp?), pane-separators, etc.

Right now it's painted in an off-white or eggshell
color, via an acryllic paint.

Which is of course getting destroyed, by the usual
water, detergent, etc.

---

So, here's the question: what kind of paint can we use
to be more waterproof than ordinary indoor paint?

[Sorry, but suggesting tile or glass in front of the
wood would be wasting your breath -- it's a window,
and it has to LOOK like any other (Pella) window in the
house! -- so I've been notified, and it's non-negotiable.]


Under those constraints, ideas?


Thanks!


David

Tony Hwang

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Jun 3, 2011, 1:33:21 AM6/3/11
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Hi,
One hint, how about glass blocks? Run your imagination wild!

nor...@earthlink.net

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Jun 3, 2011, 7:11:12 AM6/3/11
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The problem is probably paint technique, not the paint itself. The
panes and moldings have to be sealed up so moisture doesn't seep between
them, inside and out. Does outside need reglazing/repainting? On
inside, paint so that the edge of the paint doesn't stop on the molding,
but has about 1/16" onto the glass. That way, slop or condensation
doesn't get into the wood and cause the paint to peel/crack. If that
doesn't work, nothing will.

Of course, a cute little planter would block some of the splashing and
possibly benefit from added moisture....how in the world does wife get
so much onto the window?

dadiOH

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Jun 3, 2011, 7:23:47 AM6/3/11
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David Combs wrote:
> Some time ago I asked a similar question, but none of the
> suggestions were acceptable to, uh, "she who must be obeyed".
>
> And I forgot to say that the existing splashboard wasn't
> just wood, but an actual window, with the usual wood frame,
> molding (sp?), pane-separators, etc.
>
> Right now it's painted in an off-white or eggshell
> color, via an acryllic paint.
>
> Which is of course getting destroyed, by the usual
> water, detergent, etc.
>
> ---
>
> So, here's the question: what kind of paint can we use
> to be more waterproof than ordinary indoor paint?

Any oil paint. Best of those would be a polyurethane one rather than alkyd.

And keep in mind that nothing lasts forever.

--

dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico

The Ghost in The Machine

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Jun 3, 2011, 7:26:12 AM6/3/11
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On Jun 3, 7:11 am, "norm...@earthlink.net" <norm...@earthlink.net>
wrote:

THAT'S WHAT I WAS GOING TO SUGGEST, "BLOCKING THE WINDOW WITH A
PLANTER".
THEN AGAIN....A GOOD SEALANT BEFORE PAINTING WILL REDUCE AMY WATER
DAMAGE TO THE WINDOW COMPARTMENT/SPLASBOARD...WHICH IN FACT IS THE
WIFEY's CONCERN.
IF DIVORCE IS OUTA THE QUESTION, I WOULD SELL..AND MOVE TO A HOUSE
WITH A BETTER KITCHEN.
BOOWAHAHAHAHA
PAT ECUM
TGITM

David Combs

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Jun 3, 2011, 2:57:05 PM6/3/11
to
In article <p7idnbv1IJ_RXHXQ...@earthlink.com>,
nor...@earthlink.net <nor...@earthlink.net> wrote:
>
...

>
>Of course, a cute little planter would block some of the splashing and
>possibly benefit from added moisture....how in the world does wife get
>so much onto the window?

Well, I do a lot of the dishes, and use the squirt hose, which reflects
off to the back.

David

JIMMIE

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Jun 3, 2011, 4:02:22 PM6/3/11
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On Jun 3, 2:57 pm, dkco...@panix.com (David Combs) wrote:
> In article <p7idnbv1IJ_RXHXQnZ2dnUVZ_uCdn...@earthlink.com>,

>
> norm...@earthlink.net <norm...@earthlink.net> wrote:
>
> ...
>
> >Of course, a cute little planter would block some of the splashing and
> >possibly benefit from added moisture....how in the world does wife get
> >so much onto the window?
>
> Well, I do a lot of the dishes, and use the squirt hose, which reflects
> off to the back.
>
> David

Dont use the hose. I took mine iut and put in something
useful....liquid hand soap dipenser..


JImmie

Vic Smith

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Jun 3, 2011, 5:00:53 PM6/3/11
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Good idea.
If you splash water all over even a backsplash won't help.
What I'd do is just keep the water off the window.
And how I'd do that is with a portable backsplash kept under the sink
or off to the side, depending on how presentable you make it.
Could be s strip of plexiglas or a plastic cutting board, etc.
Glue some weather stripping or sponge on the bottom edge, and stick it
upright behind the faucets when you figure you'll be splashing water
on the window. Nice project, and an easy one.

--Vic

The Ghost in The Machine

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Jun 3, 2011, 5:23:46 PM6/3/11
to

THERE IS A PLASTIC HIPPY POSTER LIKE THING THAT READS "THIS IS THE
PITS" IN THE KITCHEN OF THIS COUPLE I HAUNT ;) I GUESS IT HELPS A
LITTLE.
BOOWAHAHAHAHA....YOU COULD GET A SIMILAR PIECE OF PLASTIC ARTWORK FOR
YOUR KITCHEN.
OR SELL AND, WELL YOU KNOW ;-)

TGITM

Joe

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Jun 4, 2011, 12:07:32 AM6/4/11
to

Its time for a decent dishwasher and get rid of the spritzer. Then
clean and paint the window area as SWMBO orders.

Joe

benick

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Jun 4, 2011, 6:51:35 PM6/4/11
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"Joe" <jbo...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:923f174b-5d54-4308...@e35g2000yqc.googlegroups.com...

Joe


DITTO...

Higgs Boson

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Jun 4, 2011, 8:19:31 PM6/4/11
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I find it useful for washing hard-to-reach areas of the sink &
counter, but find it clumsy to pull out & retract.

HB

Cindy Hamilton

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Jun 6, 2011, 3:17:10 PM6/6/11
to
On Jun 3, 1:24 am, dkco...@panix.com (David Combs) wrote:
> Some time ago I asked a similar question, but none of the
> suggestions were acceptable to, uh, "she who must be obeyed".
>
> And I forgot to say that the existing splashboard wasn't
> just wood, but an actual window, with the usual wood frame,
> molding (sp?), pane-separators, etc.
>
> Right now it's painted in an off-white or eggshell
> color, via an acryllic paint.
>
> Which is of course getting destroyed, by the usual
> water, detergent, etc.
>
> ---
>
> So, here's the question: what kind of paint can we use
> to be more waterproof than ordinary indoor paint?

Does your situation look anything like this:

http://www.adi.com/~hamilton/house/insidepix/kitW.jpg

That's my kitchen. It's just got ordinary paint. Oil-based,
I think. Looks fine. Cleans up easily. No destruction. It
was painted before I moved in 11 years ago.

What's your wife doing to it?

Cindy Hamilton

Vic Smith

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Jun 6, 2011, 5:43:17 PM6/6/11
to

Mine is like that, a splashboard, and a few inches of wall from the
sink top to the window.
David says his window is on the same level as the sink top, with
nothing between.
Different. Odd design. Sounds like the sink was moved from its
original location and put up against the window.

--Vic


chaniarts

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Jun 7, 2011, 10:59:29 AM6/7/11
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this is common in older houses in az. sounds like a passthrough window to
the patio/pool. lets mom keep an eye on the kids whilst doing the dishes.


mkir...@rochester.rr.com

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Jun 7, 2011, 1:44:32 PM6/7/11
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On Jun 3, 1:24 am, dkco...@panix.com (David Combs) wrote:
> Under those constraints, ideas?

Legal separation, followed by divorce proceedings.

David Combs

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Jun 11, 2011, 11:13:10 PM6/11/11
to
In article <72dd5964-b355-4c59...@h36g2000pro.googlegroups.com>,

Easy answer (but perhaps unacceptable ONE house resident) --
KEEP it pulled out, all the way. Let the "head" live, say,
in the dish-rack.

David

David Combs

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Jun 11, 2011, 11:21:52 PM6/11/11
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In article <0JSdnVIMSPJrK3fQ...@neonova.net>,

What, just stick the dishes into the washer with food sticking
to them? Or even just "dish". And the food dries and hardens
onto the plate(s) for several days until dishwasher gets somewhat
filled? (Two-person household)

Man, I *like* that squirter -- blasts food right off the plate,
spritz it with squirt-bottle 5%dawn 95%water, give a quick
brush stroke or two, and set into the drying rack on counter.

That idea of plastic barrier is interesting -- heck, I'd just
leave it there, until guests arrive, I suppose. (But, alas and
alak, I'm not totally in charge here!)

David


David Combs

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Jun 11, 2011, 11:29:25 PM6/11/11
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In article <88db6c5e-5387-40fd...@hv8g2000vbb.googlegroups.com>,

Cindy Hamilton <angelica...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>Does your situation look anything like this:
>
>http://www.adi.com/~hamilton/house/insidepix/kitW.jpg
>
WOW, so nice and clean!

No way I'm going to post a photo, no sireee!


>That's my kitchen. It's just got ordinary paint. Oil-based,
>I think. Looks fine. Cleans up easily. No destruction. It
>was painted before I moved in 11 years ago.
>
>What's your wife doing to it?

More like, what am *I* doing to it?

>Cindy Hamilton

Well, oil-based is clearly the correct solution, but vetoed,
because all the current paint would have to be scraped off
down to the wood, and deemed way too much work.

So we bought some non-oil-based but still water "resistant",
which we'll put on in a week or two.


David


Lynnsm...@me.com

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May 27, 2015, 5:51:53 PM5/27/15
to
LOL I was just looking for portable slash guard to keep my kitchen window from getting so disgusting. I hate cleaning windows to begin with so EXTRA window cleaning won't do. Did you ever find something that works? I'll continue my search and let you know if I find anything.

ItsJoanNotJoann

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May 27, 2015, 9:39:39 PM5/27/15
to
On Wednesday, May 27, 2015 at 4:51:53 PM UTC-5, Lynnsm...@me.com wrote:
>
I hate cleaning windows to begin with so EXTRA window cleaning won't do. Did you ever find something that works? I'll continue my search and let you know if I find anything.
>
>
Oh PLEASE do!! I'm sure the OP is still searching for a
solution FOUR YEARS after he posted his request.

skyla...@gmail.com

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Aug 8, 2020, 1:03:05 AM8/8/20
to
I'm having the same problem.. So if anyone has any other ideas.. Please shed some light

Thomas

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Aug 8, 2020, 3:50:55 AM8/8/20
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Lay your nice kitchen towel back there.
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