Friday, August 1, 2025

Painting above the windows

 Some of the windows are in the middle of solid stone block walls.  To do this, they put a metal plate from the stone wall on the right to the stone wall on the left, and then put the stone blocks that go above the window on top of that metal plate.  For example here is the exterior view of the small window in the master bathroom.


 Notice how this is not a problem when there is no stone above the window, then they just put a 1x4 piece of wood, as in this example of the small window in the central bathroom which opens out onto the deck.


 All the windows with the metal plates are on the West and Southwest sides of the house.

The plates were painted, at some point, to try to match the color of the stone -- an off-white.  But the paint is weathered and peeling.  For example, here the small double-hung window in the loft.

 

There are 3 colors that might be reasonable for these bars -- trying to match the stone, trying to match the trim around the window, or trying to match the wood trim of the house (which we just had re-stained and is Behr Chocolate SC-129).  We used a photo-editor to select and change the color of the metal plate in the above photo, and Linda selected the Chocolate color to match the house trim.  So off to Home Depot to get a quart of that.  $37.76, including masking tape and plastic film.

Each of the plates is at most 4 inches deep, and the window lengths are 24 inches for the small windows and 30 inches (times two) for the larger windows.  With 4 of the small windows and 4 of the larger double windows, we get a total of 36 lineal feet or 12 square feet that need to be painted.  A quart should cover about 88 square feet.

 The first task is to scrape and clean the metal plates.  Then we had to mask off the window and the surrounding stone.  That took 2 hours. 


 Then there was the actual painting, another hour.

There were a few spots where it seemed the underlying white paint from the previous painting was showing thru, so we put a second coat  on the center part of the plates (staying away from the edges).


 

 


 

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