Jordan offered to replace the screens and Tom happened to have a roll of brand new screen in his stash. So Jordan got right on it and replaced all four in one afternoon.
Wow, what a difference - no holes, no dirt, a clear view, and no more West Nile Mosquitos. I was so inspired that I went on a cleaning spree and cleaned all the windows and doors across the back porch.
So, the problem became "how to protect the screens from being pushed out and hole-poked" by big hands, little hands, and other body parts opening and closing the doors. I ran to Lowes thinking they would have a myriad of choices, or at least a couple, of screen guards.
Nope. They had one ugly style that I just couldn't bring myself to purchase. So, I searched the internet...nada. What happened to those decorative screen guards that used to be on all those screen doors that I remember from my childhood?
I did the next best thing...repurposed.
I went to Hobby Lobby and found decorative ironwork that's meant to be hung on the wall.
And I had Jordan screw them onto the door. Voila! Protects the screen, looks great. At least, I think so.
hey, that looks cute! Maybe I'll do this if I don't like the ones I find at Home Depot
ReplyDeleteI looked online at Home Depot and they had the same thing Lowes did.
ReplyDeleteLove this idea. Is your door wood or metal? If metal, how did u attach them to door?
ReplyDeleteMy doors are wood. I just screwed into the wood inside the "curley-cues" of the decorative panel so that the screw head isn't noticeable at all.
ReplyDeleteLooks great. Just curious though, how does this look from outside?
ReplyDelete