News0 min ago
Changing the look of doors
3 Answers
The internal doors in my flat are good quality but very 70's looking. They are oak coloured panel doors and I would love to replace them but can't afford to.
Do you have any suggestions on what I can do to liven them up?
If they were white or beech I wouldn't mind but if I decided to paint them white I think they would look worse.
Any ideas will be warmly received.
Thanks.
Do you have any suggestions on what I can do to liven them up?
If they were white or beech I wouldn't mind but if I decided to paint them white I think they would look worse.
Any ideas will be warmly received.
Thanks.
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If you don't mind the extra work, you can remove the doors from their hinges (probably only one pin per hinge) and sand them thoroughly. If you sand them, you'll need to get off all the old finish, else they come out looking spotty.
Once they're sanded then simply pick out the lighter polyurethane finish you think you'd like. You could test it's color on one corner, though you'd have to re-sand that area once you decide.
We've finished some similar doors here in the U.S. and I finished them in a "washed oak stain"... but you could pick out anything that catches your fancy. Stay with polyurethane for cleanability and gloss. You could then change out the hardware, including hinges readily, going with a contrasting color such as oil rubbed bronze(seen here: http://www.edirecthardware.com/articles/oil-ru bbed-bronze-cabinet-hardware.html ) that's so popular over here right now.
None of this would be terribly expensive... just labor intensive... Best of luck!
Once they're sanded then simply pick out the lighter polyurethane finish you think you'd like. You could test it's color on one corner, though you'd have to re-sand that area once you decide.
We've finished some similar doors here in the U.S. and I finished them in a "washed oak stain"... but you could pick out anything that catches your fancy. Stay with polyurethane for cleanability and gloss. You could then change out the hardware, including hinges readily, going with a contrasting color such as oil rubbed bronze(seen here: http://www.edirecthardware.com/articles/oil-ru bbed-bronze-cabinet-hardware.html ) that's so popular over here right now.
None of this would be terribly expensive... just labor intensive... Best of luck!