Our hall has a couple of quite nice Victorian stained glass windows. To help keep things a bit warmer, I'm thinking about putting a second sheet of glass in front, which leads to a few questions for the collective wisdom and experience. This is the bigger one:
The existing window is held behind a narrow strip of wood which is fairly flat
I'm thinking that if I first make sure that the current wood surround is properly planar, I could put glazing tape all round, lift a piece of glass into place so it sticks, and finish off with a thin strip of wood all round, planed to an ovolo profile, fixed onto the surrounding wall.
Questions include:
Would this work?
What sort of tape should I use?
What is the ideal gap? (Do I need to add some wood to make it bigger?)
Do I need toughened glass?
I'm assuming I will need to fix any little gaps in the stained glass window's putty, and paint the woodwork one last time, but if it deteriorates after a few years will I wish I had fixed the extra glass to a removable frame, or just surrounded it with non-adhesive draught proofing tape?
There is a second window above the door, in a timber frame.
The existing window is held behind a narrow strip of wood which is fairly flat
I'm thinking that if I first make sure that the current wood surround is properly planar, I could put glazing tape all round, lift a piece of glass into place so it sticks, and finish off with a thin strip of wood all round, planed to an ovolo profile, fixed onto the surrounding wall.
Questions include:
Would this work?
What sort of tape should I use?
What is the ideal gap? (Do I need to add some wood to make it bigger?)
Do I need toughened glass?
I'm assuming I will need to fix any little gaps in the stained glass window's putty, and paint the woodwork one last time, but if it deteriorates after a few years will I wish I had fixed the extra glass to a removable frame, or just surrounded it with non-adhesive draught proofing tape?
There is a second window above the door, in a timber frame.