Home Improvement Guide

Home Improvement Videos Section


Welcome to Home Improvement Guide

Home Improvement Videos Article

The following matter you read helps you understand home improvement better.


How to Replace the Screens in Your Windows


In many parts of the world, window screens are an important necessity of comfortable living. While extremely helpful in keeping out unwanted intruders and letting fresh air flow in, screens are by nature delicate and often need repair or replacement. Particularly if you have a rambunctious dog and a sliding screen door, as my parents do. In their case, they have learned to keep a roll of fresh screening handy. In your case, hopefully this won't be quite as regular of a task!

On the do-it-yourself (DIY) scale, repairing or replacing screens is relatively easy and requires little elbow grease. The only materials required are:

New screening or screen patches

scissors

household cement

screen rolling tool

razor knife

square

1x2 and 1x4 stock to stretch the new screening

stapler

brads

wood putty

Screen Repairs

If you have noticed a small hole in your window screen, less than about 3" in diameter, you can simply repair the hole. Plastic screens are difficult to patch and should probably replaced. Fiberglass screens can go either way, while metal screens are easy to patch.

Measure the hole(s) and buy ready-made patches or cut them from new screening. For small holes, the patch should have a minimum diameter at least a half-inch larger than the hole. Larger holes require a full inch extra diameter of replacement screening.

To insert the patch into the screen, unravel quite a few strands around the patch's edges. Interweave these strands with the screening and bent until the patch is held tightly in place. The stands can usually be bent by hand, but if the screening is heavier you can use long-nosed pliers. Plastic patches also require some household cement on the strand ends after they have been woven into the screen.

Small holes (less than 3/8") with some household cement.

Screen Replacement

Replacing screens in metal and wooden frames can require different procedures. Because replacing screens in metal frames is easier, I'll discuss that process first and then move on to replacement of screens in wood frames.

Replace screening in a metal frame

Remove the screen from the window and lay on a hard, flat surface large enough to support the entire frame.

Remove rubber edging from the old screen. Set aside for reuse if it is in good shape. If not, discard it. Measure and cut new rubber edging.

Remove the old, damaged screening. The damaged screening and any scraps can be saved for future repairs.

Using the old screening as a pattern or measurements of the window, measure out the new screening from a replacement roll. Be certain to leave sufficient excess screening on all sides—typically enough to reach the outsides of the frame and a bit more.

With a screen rolling tool, start in a corner of the frame to tighten the screening into place. Press the rubber edging into the groove and secure the screening in the frame. Work your way slowly and with a steady hand around the screen. This helps avoid the errors of bending the screen frame, which is often made of thin aluminum, and ripping the screening with the screen rolling tool.

If you are finding the process difficult, try tacking the material to the frame first (recommended for fabric but not aluminum) or use a spreader to support long screens.


When the screening is pressed tightly into the frame, trim excess material with a razor knife.

Replace the screen in the window. Sit back and relax in your insect-free home!

Replace screening in a wood frame

Replacing the screening in a wood frame can be more challenging because of the care necessary in affixing the screening to the frame.

In the existing frame, start in the center of a strip of screen molding and work toward the ends, prying slowly along the way. Be careful not to break it.

For wood frames, the wedge method of stretching ensures tight screening for a quality finished product. For this method, have some 1x2 stock that is slightly wider than the frame handy. Also use 1x4 stocks to make the wedges.

Cut new screening from a replacement roll. Be certain to leave sufficient excess screening on all sides—typically enough to reach the outsides of the frame and a bit more.

Make the best use of life by learning and reading as much as possible. read about things unknown, and more about things known, like about home improvement.

Staple screening across top edge. Nail the bottom cleat to a bench or flat surface and install the 1x2 cleats. Roll the new screening over the cleats and nail to the top cleat.

Between the cleats and screen frame, insert the wedges. Tap wedges until the screen is pulled taut.

Every few inches, put a staple in the screening along the bottom and then the sides.

Trim excess screening. Countersink brads to refit screen moldings and fill holes with wood putty.

This is the counterpart to our previous paragraph on home improvement. Please read that paragraph to get a better understanding to this paragraph.

Finally, staple the entire screen tightly in place working from the center brace outward. Remove the wedges and the screen should stay taut. Use a screen rolling tool or putty knife to replace the screen moldings. As with the metal-framed screen, relax and enjoy the peace and quiet your hard work has afforded you!


The aim of this article was to spread as much information on home improvement as possible. We surely do hope that we have succeeded in it.


Home Improvement Videos Best products


Home Improvement Videos News

NHL ‘Winter Classic’ ratings improve over last year - Times Union Blogs

NBC Sports reported today that the NHL “Winter Classic” game, played Thursday between the Detroit Red Wings and Chicago Blackhawks at historic Wrigley Field, got a 2.9 overnight rating, a 12 percent improvement over last year’s inaugural Winter ...

Read more...


George Little: Any day outside is a day well spent - State Journal-Register

With 2008 in the books, the annual 10 best and 10 worst lists have been released. There are a lot of them. Topics include the sexiest celebrities, books I should have read, movies I didn’t see and several trends and hot topics of the past year that ...

Read more...


Bringing Broadband to the Urban Poor - Top Tech News

For the urban poor, service may be available, but many families can't afford the $30 to $50 it costs each month to get broadband. Many also lack computers at home. Among households with an annual income of $50,000 or less -- about half the country ...

Read more...


LG High-Def TVs To Stream Netflix Videos - Tech.slashdot.org

DJAdapt writes to tell us that LG has launched a new line of high definition TVs that will be capable of streaming Netflix videos with no additional hardware. This is just another in a long line of expansions from the once DVD rental service, which ...

Read more...


HP MediaSmart Servers offer a central location for digital media on a ... - DailyTech

Digital media consumption is growing rapidly thanks to the low cost and easy to use digital cameras and camcorders available today. Many people are now making home movies in digital formats that can easily be shared online and stored on the computer ...

Read more...


Jobs Classifieds Real Estate Rentals Autos - Cedar Rapids Gazette

WATERLOO — Four men were arrested Tuesday for stealing computers and tools valued at more than $1,000. Police received a report of a burglary at Town and Country Home Improvement in the 4900 block of Dubuque Road around 5:35 a.m. Tuesday. An ...

Read more...