Posted to rec.woodworking
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Japanese Shoji Paper - PVC laminated?
On Sat, 14 Jul 2012 14:48:04 -0500, Swingman wrote:
On 7/14/2012 1:24 PM, Mike M wrote:
On Sat, 14 Jul 2012 12:39:31 -0500, Swingman wrote:
On 7/11/2012 8:30 PM, Swingman wrote:
1. Cut sheet material 1/16" undersize of opening, with fresh sharp
utility knife and using t-Square.
2. Mount to rabbets and muntin grille with any quality, double sided
tape, as needed.
He said you could use silicon (extremely messy), or Warlon Sheet Bond
(available only in Japanese stores), but the double sided tape would
work as well, and have the plus of the owner being able to remove/change
in the future.
The Laminated Shoji paper arrived yesterday evening via FedEx, rolled up
in a tube.
Mounted it this morning (with assistance from a friend of ours who has a
picture framing shop in the neighborhood), and using double sided tape
as above. Good thing to, because it takes at least four hands of the
"never did this before variety":
https://picasaweb.google.com/1113554...78805641652994
Two photos in a row.
Looks really good. I'm assuming using the laminated sheet makes it
easier to install with out any possible wrinkles showing? If you
were doing it solo could you do it like you were doing contact glue
and support it above the tape as you had it so the double tape was
beneath the surface? I really like how the light background makes the
frame pop out.
You could pretty much use the same technique used for laminating any
substrate, except with this stuff it is better, at least for the
inexperienced, to start at one end and work your way to the other ...
one person holding one end up high, with an arc toward the end where the
application is starting; and the other person guiding and pressing the
material to tape, working toward the high held end ... with only +1/32"
clearance side to side, and top to bottom, the start is critical.
Actually much easier than it sounds, but I would still want four hands
on the job because, even laminated, you would probably ruin the stuff if
you had to start over.
Both sheets were cut to 16 9/16 x 24 3/16, so at roughly $10 linear
foot, including shipping, it cost a tad over $16/door. The 3' x 6' roll
was $66.70 with shipping.
That's very reasonable, IMO ... and I have plenty for two more doors of
the same size left.
Got it, no option to trim later, if you get off your stuck pulling it
up.
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