Quote:
Nice job on the coop!
I have to ask about the windows. Did you use glazing points on both sides of the glass to hold it in?
Here is what to do. This is how windows were done before all of the aluminum and vinyl.
Use quarter round stock finish-nailed into your frame. The glass (cut a 1/4" smaller to give an 1/8" gap all around) then inserts from the back and rests against the quarter round. The glazing points then hold the glass against the quarter round. Glazing putty is then rolled in your hand into a long rope and applied into the corner, using a putty knife held at the appropriate angle to form a nice fillet and "cut" the excess compound from the fillet. The outside of the window does not get caulked or glazed. When you paint it, you very carefully feather the paint just a bit onto the glass to seal the gap between the quarter round and the glass.
Hope this helps!
Nice job on the coop!
I have to ask about the windows. Did you use glazing points on both sides of the glass to hold it in?
Here is what to do. This is how windows were done before all of the aluminum and vinyl.
Use quarter round stock finish-nailed into your frame. The glass (cut a 1/4" smaller to give an 1/8" gap all around) then inserts from the back and rests against the quarter round. The glazing points then hold the glass against the quarter round. Glazing putty is then rolled in your hand into a long rope and applied into the corner, using a putty knife held at the appropriate angle to form a nice fillet and "cut" the excess compound from the fillet. The outside of the window does not get caulked or glazed. When you paint it, you very carefully feather the paint just a bit onto the glass to seal the gap between the quarter round and the glass.
Hope this helps!
