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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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In article ,
Clive Arthur wrote: Loads of old panelled Victorian doors in our house. OF course, these have been painted many times and the panels are immovable and often cracked. Filling and painting is a bit Forth bridge like. If I had some thin material which wouldn't crack and looked like wood or maybe was wood, I could cover the panels with this. The slight loss of depth probably wouldn't show. What might work? I had the same problem - back in the day when stripped wood was popular. Still is with me. I carefully cut the beading off one side. It's a stock moulding in London, so possible to replace with new if needed. Bashed the broken panel out - it fits in a groove in the frame. Found some suitable thickness ply with a veneer that looked OK. Cut it slightly oversize so it could be wiggled (and glued) into the groove. On the side of the door where I'd removed the moulding (chose the worst side for this) I removed it from the other three panels and replaced with new - glued and pinned. Stained both the moulding and panel to the best match I could achieve and gave the door a coat of clear matt varnish. Still pleased with the results. Did much the same to the panelling round the bay window. I'm sure there might be a high tech filler to sort the cracks in the panelling that could be stained to be invisible. They'd certainly manage that on The Repair Shop. But I'm talking about 40 years ago. -- *Marriage changes passion - suddenly you're in bed with a relative* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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