The Washington Post - 14.11.2019

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the washington post


.


thursday, november


14


,


2019


MD


Columnists:


Adrian Higgins, Meghan Leahy


Email: [email protected]


Telephone: 202-334-4409


Mail:


Local Living section,


The Washington Post, 1301 K St.


NW, Washington, D.C. 20071


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Doug Coffelt, 202-334-4440


ON THE COVER


Illustration by Kotryna Zukauskaite


for The Washington Post


Editor:


Kendra Nichols


Deputy Editors:


Elizabeth Chang, Amy Joyce,


Mari-Jane Williams


Art Director:


Victoria Adams Fogg


Designer:


J.C. Reed


Photo Editor:


Jennifer Beeson Gregory


Staff Writers:


Helen Carefoot, Jura Koncius


LOCAL LIVING


Home


problem. The wood that makes


up that frame in front of the


mirror does the real heavy lifting


in supporting the mirror’s


weight.


If the mirror seems secure and


the problems with the backing


seem as though they’re just


visual problems, you might want


to leave it as is. Squirting glue


into gaps between the backing


and the framing isn’t a good idea.


Although some glues are


formulated to fill gaps, many


others, including cyanoacrylates


such as Krazy Glue (a brand of


Elmer’s Products), aren’t really


gap fillers; they bond two


surfaces that are tightly pressed


together. Plus, some glues


contain ingredients that ruin the


silvery coating that makes a


mirror a mirror.


If the mirror on your hall rack


seems in danger of tipping out,


though, beefing up the


connection makes sense. The


simplest option would be to add


a few more fasteners. Although


nails were used originally, it’s


surprisingly difficult to pound


nails into wood that’s upright


and free-standing, without solid


backing behind it. The piece


moves with each hammer tap,


thwarting your efforts.


Instead, use screws. You might


be able to get them to hold


securely in some of the empty


holes left by the tacks that have


fallen out. Otherwise, place the


screws the same distance from


the edge but midway between


the fasteners from side to side.


Pre-drill with a bit just slightly


narrower than the screw shank.


Wrap a piece of tape around the


bit first as a depth gauge so you


don’t accidentally drill so deep


that you make a hole through the


front. Rather than using screws


with heads that are bugle-


shaped, get pan-head screws,


which have heads that are flat on


the back, so the screw heads


don’t dig into the backing and


cause it to split — a risk when


drilling close to the edge.


If the backing is so severely


warped that you can’t get screws


to hold, you could replace the


backing without affecting the


original look of the parts of the


hall rack that show. But you


would need to proceed


cautiously while removing the


old wood because backing is


sometimes held to the mirror


with glue, said Tonya Collins,


account manager at Schoenbauer


Furniture Service (800-955-7603;


schoenbauer.com), which repairs


furniture throughout the


Washington area. “With antique


pieces, nothing is 100 percent the


same from piece to piece,” she


said.


If you aren’t sure whether the


mirror is secure or if you don’t


want to tackle making it more


secure, a company that repairs


antique furniture can help you.


Schoenbauer makes house calls


for a minimum fee of $175, which


would cover an assessment plus


adding more fasteners. If the


backing needs to be replaced, the


initial visit would cover getting


the shape for a replacement


piece, but the cost of the new


material and the installation


would be extra, Collins said.


 Have a problem in your home?


Send questions to


[email protected]. Put “How


To” in the subject line, tell us where


you live and try to include a photo.


BY JEANNE HUBER


Q: I live with my grandfather’s


hall rack, which has the original


mirror held by two half-circles of


wood. They are tacked onto the


main piece by brads. The half


circles are warped, and some


brads have fallen out. I’ve tried


Krazy Glue, but it doesn’t hold


the warped wood. I don’t want to


try re-tacking the wood for fear


of making things worse. What


can I do?


Washington


A: A framed mirror, which is


essentially what you have on


your hall rack, typically sits in a


rabbet, or groove, that rings the


opening. With a beveled mirror


like yours, the groove might even


have an angle that matches the


bevel. Behind the mirror, there is


usually a thin wooden backing,


often made of relatively ugly,


unfinished wood. The backing


can also be plywood or


hardboard, a panel material


made of wood fibers that began


showing up in furniture in the


1920s.


Whatever the material, it


usually isn’t especially good-


looking on furniture designed to


sit against a wall, as with your


hall rack. The builders knew the


backing would be out of sight, so


it was a good place use pieces


that might otherwise be scrap.


Also, the functional demands on


the backing are modest: keeping


the back of the mirror from


scratches that would remove


some of the silvering and


preventing the mirror from


tipping out of the frame.


So unless your hall stand has


been jostled and tipped a lot,


which would probably happen


during moves, the brads holding


the backing in place aren’t likely


to be under much pressure. Even


the warping may not be a


HOW TO


Warped wood around a hall rack mirror might not be an issue


READER PHOTO

If the mirror seems secure and the problems with the backing seem as though they’re just visual problems, you might want to leave it as is


— squirting glue into gaps between the backing and the framing isn’t a good idea. If the mirror seems in danger of tipping out, though,


beefing up the connection makes sense. The simplest option would be to add a few more fasteners.

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