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Post by sweetshabbyroses on Feb 10, 2024 17:55:06 GMT
I want to put some decorative window film/tint on my pantry door. I want to put it on the inside of the door because it is one solid glass piece. If I put it on the outside, I have to cut a piece to fit in every little pane (the door has mullions or crosshatches or whatever you call them). Every time I type in google "double-sided window film) it takes me to single-sided. Is my question making sense?
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Post by compeateropeator on Feb 10, 2024 18:05:08 GMT
So basically you want the sticky side to also be the tinted side of what you are applying? It seems like that would not be an uncommon way to use it? I’ll poke around a bit but hopefully someone can give you some good information.
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Post by Merge on Feb 10, 2024 18:05:57 GMT
IDK about window tint, but maybe a pretty piece of fabric or oilcloth tacked to the inside (with pretty side facing out) would do the trick?
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katybee
Drama Llama
Posts: 5,403
Jun 25, 2014 23:25:39 GMT
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Post by katybee on Feb 10, 2024 18:36:05 GMT
Ha! I thought you were asking for your car! Definitely had a WTF moment there…
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Post by Basket1lady on Feb 10, 2024 18:40:55 GMT
I want to put some decorative window film/tint on my pantry door. I want to put it on the inside of the door because it is one solid glass piece. If I put it on the outside, I have to cut a piece to fit in every little pane (the door has mullions or crosshatches or whatever you call them). Every time I type in google "double-sided window film) it takes me to single-sided. Is my question making sense? I think that it will work as intended if you install it on the inside. It’s not sticky—it’s static cling film. You wet the glass and install it by squeegeeing out the water. It’s under $10 a roll on Amazon, so you have little to lose. Go ahead and try it!
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