M
Mickymoody
As it says above, I have the porch door, with two panels of fancy glass, that is textured, and the door looks old, so maybe origional to the house, circa 1890's?
How would I go on for replacing one panel to match the other panel?
I can't initially go to a glazier and say fix it, as they don't know what the pattern is, so would incur a callout charge just to look? The design is curved at the top, so would expect to be a nightmare to fit, and the beading is nailed in, so would be a nightmare DIY job. Hammers, nails, and glass for me don't mix. I invented L shaped nails, and dead black thumbs.
But as the door seems origional to the house, I wouldn't want to bin it, but expect that it may be more expensive to repair rather than replace?
Also, I love retro, and hate to bin anything, and always fix everything.
Any advice?
How would I go on for replacing one panel to match the other panel?
I can't initially go to a glazier and say fix it, as they don't know what the pattern is, so would incur a callout charge just to look? The design is curved at the top, so would expect to be a nightmare to fit, and the beading is nailed in, so would be a nightmare DIY job. Hammers, nails, and glass for me don't mix. I invented L shaped nails, and dead black thumbs.
But as the door seems origional to the house, I wouldn't want to bin it, but expect that it may be more expensive to repair rather than replace?
Also, I love retro, and hate to bin anything, and always fix everything.
Any advice?