![]() An original receipt or gift receipt is required for all returns and exchanges. Within 30 days, you may return most items for a refund of the merchandise value. Upon receipt, please inspect your purchase and notify us of any damage we will arrange for a prompt replacement. Attention to design, materials, safety and construction are our priority. For more details, please see our Shipping page.Īt Pottery Barn, we take great pride in the quality and craftsmanship of our products. The exact shipping charge is based on your location, and delivery times vary based on item availability. These items will be delivered by our In-Home Delivery & Assembly service provider where items are brought into your home, unpacked and assembled (some exclusions apply) and the packaging is responsibly removed.Įligible items will show "Unlimited Flat Rate Delivery" on the product page. Let me know if you create this diy multipanel mirror and you also might like a few of these other fun easy diy projects.UNLIMITED FLAT RATE DELIVERY – FURNITURE + OVERSIZED ITEMSĪn unlimited number of eligible furniture items can be delivered for a single flat rate, per shipping address. ![]() Here is another shot of the finished diy multipanel mirror. If you have any questions you are more than welcome to email me and I will try to answer them to my best ability. But, I feel like the process was fairly straight forward and easy to understand. Oops! If I happen to run across them at some point I will update this post. I searched through every sd card I own and still no pictures. I wished I could share more pictures of the steps we took. You can decide which way works best for you but I suggest going the gluing route. So… instead we decided to use E6000 industrial glue to attach the panel. ![]() However, we were a little nervous about hitting and shattering the mirror. We were going to originally go with brad nails along the edging to attach. Now the final step is attaching the inside panel to the mirror.Once you have all your inside pieces cut you can use some clamps and glue to set up the faux panels.We had the vertical pieces full length and cut the sides pieces to fit. Why? because it is important to have the pieces fit snug. I don’t have exact measurements to this because they need to be measured to your mirror. First we measured and cut the pieces to fit. Now the final step was attaching the inside framing to the mirror.Once the framing was fully dried we used loctite mirror adhesive and attached the mirror to the plywood.You could also attach these with brad nails if you chose to. We then lined the framing up with the edges and glued them with wood glue. We cut the bottom and top pieces to 39 inches and the sides to 48 inches. Now that you have your plywood cut you can cut your pine board framing down to size.If you have a bigger or smaller mirror just add an additional 3 inches per mirror size for your plywood cut. This is 1 and 1/2 inches on each side of the mirror for the pine board framing. Once you have the mirror picked out you will want to cut your plywood down to size.You can go with the 36 x 48 inch or your local home improvement store will probably carry I variety of frame-less mirror sizes. First you will want to pick out a mirror that will fit your space.Just a heads up if you would rather go that route to.) I didn’t realize they actually did that… knowing now I might have looked into doing that. we probably could have had custom tile sizes cut buuuutttt…. So the next best thing was to make a custom mirror using a frame-less 36 x 48 mirror. However, we had a specific spot in mind and 3 (12 x 12) mirror tiles across would have been to long. You can check out how Ana White created one with mirror tiles here. Table or circular sawĬlampsįirst things first… I want to mention that the easiest way to do this would be to use mirror tiles. 1/2 sheet of 1/4 inch plywood (cheaper to buy a whole sheet)ģ6 x 48 frame-less mirror (or 12 x 12 mirror tiles)
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