![]() ![]() When considering this project you might assume, as we did, that there are studs frame out this window. The trick is to make sure you attach the hinges to the boards themselves and not the wooden brackets holding your boards together. It really is such a fun and easy project! And the results really, really pay off.įor hinges, we just used simple barrel hinges. Then, make sure you haven’t already had too much coffee and get to cutting with you skill saw. Using a drill, predrill a hole as a starting place for your skill saw blade. It may be easiest to start with the middle circle and determine where to place the two additional circles from there. A plate or other template works great for this. Space them evenly apart and the same distance from the sides. Next you’ll draw out your portholes, leaving about an inch from the edge of your boards. If you don’t have one, I seriously recommend it! Secure these brackets with a little wood glue and your nail gun. Make sure you measure your bracket so that they fit inside your window opening. We used 4, one on either side of each of the 3 holes. Also, once you have your boards cut to the proper length (and/or width) you’ll place some wooden brackets (again we used cedar scraps to make these) on the back to hold your boards together. Pay close attention to where your shower insert or tile starts because you don’t want your shutter to hang down over that. The easiest thing to do is to measure your window opening and then give yourself about an inch of an overlap all the way around. I am intentionally leaving out measurements here because your window is likely different from mine anyway. ![]() We were fortunate that three of those boards together created the perfect coverage for our window. We used some cedar boards left over from our square foot garden box, you can see those here. But since this faux porthole window shutter was so easy to put together I decided to just go ahead and make it, see how I felt about how it looked and the decide if it was a go or not. I worried making it look like a porthole might be “over doing it”. I worried a window shutter might block out too much light. There’s a fine line between just right and over the top. I like to have a theme when decorating but I don’t like for it to be too over done. Once I started looking at the shower like a beautiful window with two DIY’ed West Elm Knock-off Shower Curtains flanking either side, I began to realize that rectangular-above-the-shower-insert window many of us have, had to go. A shower looks so much like a window to me it makes me wonder why I never thought of two shower curtains before. The idea first struck me when I decided on two shower curtains instead of one. But I didn’t want to take any fun away from my two boys who will wind up using the bathroom far more than any of our guests will. I knew I wanted a bathroom that would feel clean, comfortable and spacious (despite its tiny size!) to guests. My decision to create a porthole in my boys’ Guest-friendly Nautical Bathroom Makeover was one such idea. Occasionally I have an idea that makes me feel really kind of great about my mostly right-brained self. ![]()
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