Window Woes Fixed With Film

Our latest project will give you a sneak peak into part of our master bathroom.  We have a water closet separating the toilet from the shower, tub, and sink area.  The prior owner had a littled faux stained glass action going on.  But look closer.  She didn’t just apply a decorative window film, she cut the film into a mosaic-style design before applying it.  Oh, and isn’t the flourescent green paint fabulous?!?

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Needless to say, we removed the decorative film, as well as the lovely valance.  Of course, that left us with a wide open view straight into the neighbors’ house, which happens to correlate to the neighbors’ wide open view into our bathroom.  Our answer happens to be more window film, but not of the stained glass variety.  We chose a textured glass pattern that blurs the view but still lets in sunlight.

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The process is pretty simple and fairly inexpensive.  The roll of film cost us about $20 and it covered this window plus half of another bathroom window.  To install, measure the window and cut the film to size.  I urge you to do a better job measuring than I did (you can see a sliver of window around the edge that didn’t get covered by film).  Make sure your window is clean, and spray it with water with a few drops of liquid soap mixed in.  Peel the backing off the film and wet that down with your diluted soap/water mixture as well.  Apply it to the window and wet it down on the outside one more time.  The third round with the spray bottle is to lubricate the outside so you can smooth it out and press out any air bubbles with a squeegee (a small one was included with the film kit).  And then you’ve got what looks like a textured glass window, but for the uncovered edge.  🙁  It still does the trick as far as privacy goes, though.

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