IWETHEY v. 0.3.0 | TODO
1,095 registered users | 0 active users | 0 LpH | Statistics
Login | Create New User
IWETHEY Banner

Welcome to IWETHEY!

New Next project: Mirrored wall
My bedroom HAD a large closet that I ripped out. It ran the entire wall. So now we've added about 4x14 feet to the room, but the wall is fugly.

To start off with, it is the concrete firewall that separates the 1/2 of the house. It had various anchored screws ripped out, it had shelves "built" into it, which left various uneven area of plaster left behind.

It also has a few different layers of paint, DEEP, in areas, but not all over.

Goal: Floor to ceiling mirrors. Not the little squares, so as large as I can afford, but not into the stupid zone. Anchored FIRMLY. EVENLY.

So, do I built an offset frame with 2x4s, or so I attempt to even the wall and place it directly? Or something else?

Recommendation on source of mirrors?
New Frame it
Otherwise you'll never get it even enough to make the angle match at the seams.
--

Drew
New Excellent point.
Especially on a wall that is in an old home, it is hopeless to try to have everything in a single plane over a large area. It'll be a vertigo-inducing mess without something to break up the reflections.

Here's a thread on what people have done for a home gym - http://forum.bodybui...=135634101&page=1

We've bought a couple of ~ 16" x ~ 58" mirrors at Lowes or HD for mounting on the back of bedroom doors. http://www.lowes.com...p_product_price|0 $25. It would get spendy to do a whole wall with them.

HTH a little.

Cheers,
Scott.
     Next project: Mirrored wall - (crazy) - (2)
         Frame it - (drook) - (1)
             Excellent point. - (Another Scott)

Three cheers for literacy... I feel sick.
53 ms