What did you spend on your front door?

  • Erstellt am 2013-11-25 16:55:19

ypg

2016-04-04 12:03:39
  • #1
We have everything inside in white and outside in 7016, but not the front door. The front door with the window side panel is made of wood and consistently in 7016. There was no long discussion about this and it was a no-brainer, as I consider the entrance door as an independent main element. The wall, the short side of the hallway, is also painted in the same color. I am also glad about it when I consider and see how sensitive white surfaces are. Just yesterday I noticed it again while cleaning the window.
 

daytona

2016-04-04 12:40:33
  • #2
Such an argument was also made by my better half, I myself am still undecided But as the saying goes, there's no accounting for taste....
 

ypg

2016-04-04 14:13:17
  • #3


... certainly can be debated. For some reason, you are taking 7016 for the exterior view
 

Sebastian79

2016-04-04 14:17:01
  • #4
Mostly, because the windows are painted in the same color.

And then you just match the inside as well. Maintenance effort for white doors is higher? Yes, certainly - but you yourself said that you have white interior doors.

Although I do find it nice with you if the wall is painted like that too.
 

ypg

2016-04-04 15:05:22
  • #5


My response was related to the fact that one chooses 7016 because they like it.
The decision to leave the window trims white on the inside usually results from the lack of imagination that it could look good inside or the view that 7016 does not harmonize with wood-colored furniture. I personally would have other reasons.
The higher maintenance effort is noticeable on the inner windows, not on the interior doors.., and yes, now that you mention it: if I had known that, I would have also chosen 7016 or black for the interior of the windows. I did not know white plastic until I built my house; I had always had higher-quality materials in my previous houses.
 

Sebastian79

2016-04-04 15:09:29
  • #6
We did not fully wrap because it is very limiting in color design.

Above all, dust is even more visible on dark surfaces than on light ones... but why is there a higher maintenance effort on an inside white exterior door than on the regular interior doors?
 
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