11 years later and this video is still helping people!! I am a 28 year old girl living with my parents in our old home in Boston, with the wooden French doors and all! Now the repairs and upkeep of our home have slowly become my responsibilities. I have some prior skill with woodwork but nothing at a professional level. I am so grateful to have videos like yours to show me how to be further self sufficient and to repair instead of replace! Hands on skills are a lost art and I am happy to be part of keeping those skills alive! I hope to pass on that knowledge to my 5 year old daughter as she grows!
Hi! So im also a 28 year old woman who just bought my first home! One of the glass panes on a beautiful French door in the living room is broken like in this video and I too want to maintain that hands on, rather than just replace. Proud of us! Im sure you'll teach your daughter some amazing things. I wish my parents had shown me more things like this when I was younger.
Thank you! Replacing a wood frame window in a 1956 home. I'm grateful for videos like this that allow me to do my own repairs and save me $. I simply can't afford to hire a contractor every time something needs to be fixed!
I will be attempting a pane replacement of Great Grandma Ellie's interior French door today. Thank you, Michael, for the following: Your organization, which allows each step to proceed smoothly; the fine camera work with clear close-ups; your polite instructional tone; and your confident expertise. Take it from an old English teacher: Your mastery of vocabulary and enunciation have taken you far. I hope that today, seven years after posting this video, you are continuing to share your talents. A+
I replaced the glass in my door by watching this video. I didn't break the moulding either thanks to his instructions. Thank you. You saved me a lot of money!
I feel like a lazy old man now because I have that same door and we had a storm it knocked out all the glass so after that I just put a piece of wood on the outside and another piece on the inside and repainted the whole door white.
i've had a broken pane in my front door for 3 years. if i knew it was this easy to repair, i wouldn't have put it off so long. your step by step instructions were fantastic! thanks!!
Hey, my pleasure. I'm really glad you found it and I was able to help. The reason I am motivated to post these kinds of videos is to help folks to be able to do things on their own, but also so that they have some background in case they are in discussions with their handyman/ contractor. Keep up the good work and thanks for the feedback.
Thank you for this video! I have a door just like this and needed some understanding on how to do this. Thanks for the details. 13 years later you content is relevant.
Thank you so much for this informative video!!! I changed the glass yesterday and it only cost me $2.78 for the glass at the local hardware store. The first piece of molding was a little tricky, but I got all 4 moldings out without breaking any!
This was exactly what I needed! Followed your example and was able to replace a regular pane, plus replaced two panes of antique glass from an extra door we had. Thank you so much for taking the time to make and post this!
This was amazing! The directions were simple and well explained. My little brother put his elbow through our window this morning so you saved my mom money and her patience! Thank you!
Thanks Michael ... i am a single mum living with my son and i had bought the glass and for weeks kept saying to myself to get it repaired ... i had considered hiring a guy to do it but thought i would try myself... so today i searched here and found you ... i hope i can do it now myself as you made it look so easy... if i follow your easy steps il have that glass in and feeling safe and confident enough to do my own diy👍
This video was a life saver. I thought I was going to have to buy a new door. My only issue was that the molding was nailed AND glued in and it was safety glass; it took a while but I got it clean. Ended up having to snap one molding, but I'm pretty sure that can be repaired with wood putty, glue and paint. Much less than a new door. Thanks so much!
Thank you very much for your well explained video! I went to work right away - used a hook bladed knife and 2 scraper bladed screwdrivers. I took out the left, right, and bottom moulding pieces only (bottom first) - allowing me to change out the glass without the need to remove the top moulding. (I had 9 panels to replace, saved me some time)
Great tutorial and simple explanations. Even easy for a "do it yourself" mom like me. I appreciate you showing the use of a variety of tools for those that may not have the same as you. Great Job!
I am so GRATEFUL for the generosity of folks like you! I know how to do it, but it was awkward. I have 2 to do and now the second one will be smooth sailing. Thanks so much
My pleasure, Karen. I was very fortunate to have a lot of opportunity to learn growing up. I built a house with my 8th grade son to let him soak it all up. Glad you found a piece of it helpful.
Thank you, Michael. This video is exactly what I needed to replace a window in a door. It was very clear and complete and after seeing it, I was able to do the job with no surprises.
Thank you. This gave me the confidence to try and replace 3 small panes in a large, old front door. I have only one comment: when I started to pry internally, i.e. not pulling it out from the door, but upwards or sidewards, I quickly noticed someone else had put small nails in the past. So the first part was actually pulling those nails out, THEN I could pry out horizontally, outward towards myself (in the video). Thanks again! Went great!
I'm so glad I found your video. That's just like my door (1957 built house) Question: how do you measure for the glass? The empty space between the frame is approximately 7.5x11. Thanks.
Once the moulding is removed you'll measure the space in between the frame. I suggest having glass cut an 1/8" small in both directions. That will give you a 1/16" on all sides for expansion / contraction. Hope that helps.
Thanks my autistic daughter broke out on of my panes on my back door. Your video saved me so much money thank you so much . Got out molding will replace glass tomorrow
Thank you so much for posting this. I have a similar problem and my contractors were afraid to touch it. Once I saw how you fixed the window, I was able to fix this myself. Thank you very, very much again.
Thanks so much for this. I have nearly the exact same type of door. The last pane that broke I called a glass repair company that charged me nearly $200. Your video made it very easy to replace the pane this time myself for less than $20.
This is EXACTLY what I needed! Not being handy with this kind thing, I had no idea how I was going to get the trim pieces on & off or if I could do it with caulk alone. Perfect! Thanks a million for this upload!!!
Awesome video! I just broke a pane in my door almost identical to the door you were working with. Took me 20 minutes to remove the broken shards and molding...keep in mind my door is from 1941 with a FEW coats of paint
excellent video, i had to break into my own house yesterday. the door is very similar to the one in this video, but mine had decades worth of paint that i get to cut through. side note, now i see just how easy it is to break into my house.
hell yeah! Your instructions came out purrfect for my 80 year old dade county pine door. don't replace with new CRAP fix the good stuff you already have. Thanks a million
Thanks, this really helped - my wife has been on me for a couple of days - I was sure I needed to buy a new door - Thank you again - we live in a century home and she is determined to maintain the appearance of the place. John
Awesome! You just saved me a bunch of money! Now that I know its this easy to replace by myself I'm not waiting any longer to replace our 2 window panels.
I noticed that when you were removing the casings that there were not any existing nails. What was holding it in before? Glue? Can you use glue to put back in instead of nails ? Or would that not hold up well? Great and informative video. Looking forward to the glazing methods I have a 114 year old house that has lots of windows in need of repair and I tried to fix the ones were the glazing has deteriorated and I was unsuccessful with the glazing.
Excellent video! You talked us all the way through and answered any questions that may have popped as we did this ourselves and added some extra helpful tips (like the cardboard box for trashing the glass and vacuuming the area B4 you start to continue replacing the glass).
Can't thank you enough for this video. I was just about to try this and really wasn't sure about some of the details. This makes a big difference and I hope I can now avoid some costly mistakes!
Great "Tutorial" this was the first time for me, now I know I can do it by watching you. At least in your video you showed us how to remove the moulding. Thanks👍
Michael, thank you for posting this video. I was stumped as to how the replacement glass was installed. One question, though: won't using nails make it more difficult to remove the molding if the glass breaks again and needs to be replaced? Isn't the pressure created by the four molding pieces on each other be sufficient to hold the glass in place? Or would an adhesive allow you to remove and replace the molding if need be? Thank you for your help.
Thank you! I kept finding videos about glazing/glazed windows but my simple single pane glass windows on my garage doors don't have any of that, just the molding wood and painted. I wasn't sure if I was supposed to use window glaze when setting the glass into the window first like shown on This Old House glazed windows or not before putting in the window molding. Cheers!~
Went 99% well , the last brad was being nailed in when you guessed it !! I tapped the glass with the hammer !!. Had to do it all over.,. but it worked out fine..The glazier gave me a tip, when tapping in the brads, slid the hammer along the glass.. Many thanks for your vid. I'll trawl thru the others now !!, Cheers from Down Under ...
Great tip using the tape to help keep the shards together & not flying through the air. Very well done video & instructions and comments extremely helpful. Thanks!
Thanks so much, the video really helped me. In my case though, the trim was glued in at the factory, there were no nails, so it was doubly hard to remove and hard to even believe they were separate pieces of wood. Also, the vertical, longer pieces of trim were mitered, and both of those had to come out first. The horizontal, shorter pieces went all the way from one side to the other, with no miter.
Thanks for the great instructions! I was able to save the finishing nails that were already in place and reuse them through the pre-existing nail holes.
Glad you didn't destroy the molding. tough to Replace. Just go slow with the push/pull technique. If it's dry, try rubbing some linseed oil and allow it to absorb into the wood first.
Great video and thanks for posting, but one important thing to mention/stress is that antique-ish doors just have the removable moldings on one side ... usually the inside. That is the side one wants to focus their efforts in popping out the moldings. One can waste a lot of effort and damage the permanent/built-in molding by trying in vain to remove it and instead ripping into the door. A novice would not know this and I found out the hard way. Thanks again though for the helpful tips.
We have an antique door and I was trying to remove the pane and started on the inside. It seems like that's going to be the right side, but then I read it should be the other side. I'm really confused! I'm halfway done and worried.
I actually think I can do this myself instead of having to pay a repair man. Thanks for the clear, step by step instructions. Now if I can just get my daughter to stop locking herself out and breaking it again.
Great video, exactly what I needed (the kids busted out 3 panes in one night). One question, What size/length finishing nail are you using? Thanks again
So, how do I know which side of the door to remove the molding from? I see the video it's the outside, but I see comments that say the inside. Now I'm scared to try for fear of tearing up my door. One of the 4 windows at the top is broken, so it would be very noticeable.
Thanks for posting this video. While there's plenty of info out there about putty-glazed windows, there's not a lot about windows with wood molding. I've got weathered, 80-year-old pane windows with mitered molding. I'm about to take them apart, clean them up, and put them back together. So I'm trying to figure out how to do it right. We get a lot of weather here -- strong sun, lots of freeze-thaw cycles, lots of rain, lots of condensation running down the inside of the window. I've been thinking of using a bead of linseed-based putty front and back to create a seal between the glass on both sides and the (primed) wood (instead of the acryl caulk). Have any words of wisdom for me on this approach?
Thanks a MILLION buddy!!... From a parent of 3 badass teenagers with BB guns who rents instead of owns, and happens to be going through this very situation right now,, this information is INVALUABLE! 😁👍
This is exactly what I need to do. I guess my only question is how do I know what size pain I actually need. Like, should it be about 1/16” larger, on all sides, beyond what will ultimately be visible, generally? Also, is there a general glass thickness that is commonly used?
can you replace the glass with insulated or is there not enough room? I would assume if possible the trim would have to be all replaced. Thank you for the great video.
Typically the exterior is the one to remove. Inside is permanent. I suggest drawing a picture of the window and labeling the diagram: L/top R/lower, etc..Then remove one window at a time and mark each piece so you know where it goes. Wrap once with masking tape and label the tape to correspond with the diagram. Measure each window carefully and have the guys at the hardware cut and wrap each piece so you can label the wrap. Pretty good bet that the windows will be slightly different.
Needed this so thank you. I'd probably drill the pilot holes in the molding before putting them up. Drilling with that glass insert there could break it. I'd probably also lay down the bead of caulk before setting the molding, not after.
Great video with clear, concise instructions. Will be using your guidelines in restoring an original door (with one broken glass frame) from my 1895 farmhouse restoration project here in my home in Mississippi. Thanks so much for the great advice and instruction you provided.
Hey amazing video! Really helped me understanding how to do it, but i have a question, instead of nails can i use just some wood glue for the frame? Or isn't safe? Cuz my window is like 1.20cm tall, a bit heavier
11 years later and this video is still helping people!! I am a 28 year old girl living with my parents in our old home in Boston, with the wooden French doors and all! Now the repairs and upkeep of our home have slowly become my responsibilities. I have some prior skill with woodwork but nothing at a professional level. I am so grateful to have videos like yours to show me how to be further self sufficient and to repair instead of replace! Hands on skills are a lost art and I am happy to be part of keeping those skills alive! I hope to pass on that knowledge to my 5 year old daughter as she grows!
Hi! So im also a 28 year old woman who just bought my first home! One of the glass panes on a beautiful French door in the living room is broken like in this video and I too want to maintain that hands on, rather than just replace. Proud of us! Im sure you'll teach your daughter some amazing things. I wish my parents had shown me more things like this when I was younger.
Fixing a door on a 1800's home in Newton. You know the ones. And this just saved me lol
12 years later... classic
2024 and I fixed a window using this video today. The pilot hole was a great tip.
10 year old video still teaching people stuff. Great info. Had to bust a single pane out to unlock the door to my house. Thanks man.
Love hearing this!
Same here! Locked myself out, will now try this diy.
Thank you! Replacing a wood frame window in a 1956 home. I'm grateful for videos like this that allow me to do my own repairs and save me $. I simply can't afford to hire a contractor every time something needs to be fixed!
I'm glad I was able to help!
I will be attempting a pane replacement of Great Grandma Ellie's interior French door today. Thank you, Michael, for the following: Your organization, which allows each step to proceed smoothly; the fine camera work with clear close-ups; your polite instructional tone; and your confident expertise. Take it from an old English teacher: Your mastery of vocabulary and enunciation have taken you far. I hope that today, seven years after posting this video, you are continuing to share your talents. A+
I replaced the glass in my door by watching this video. I didn't break the moulding either thanks to his instructions. Thank you. You saved me a lot of money!
I feel like a lazy old man now because I have that same door and we had a storm it knocked out all the glass so after that I just put a piece of wood on the outside and another piece on the inside and repainted the whole door white.
i've had a broken pane in my front door for 3 years. if i knew it was this easy to repair, i wouldn't have put it off so long. your step by step instructions were fantastic! thanks!!
Hey, my pleasure. I'm really glad you found it and I was able to help. The reason I am motivated to post these kinds of videos is to help folks to be able to do things on their own, but also so that they have some background in case they are in discussions with their handyman/ contractor. Keep up the good work and thanks for the feedback.
How much would you charge all the labor start to finish with painting?
I am soooo grateful because you gave me the knowledge and the courage to replace my glass panels BY MYSELF!!! Thank you, Michael.
Thank you for this video! I have a door just like this and needed some understanding on how to do this. Thanks for the details. 13 years later you content is relevant.
#Agreed 🎩✌🏻☆
More than 9 years after you posted, I found your video and you definitely saved my molding. Thanks!
I come to UA-cam for information on all kinds of projects before I begin. Yours is very well done, simple and straightforward.
Thanks!
Thank you!!! Just replaced a broken window on my garage man door. Your advice to take your time was a huge help.
Thank you so much for this informative video!!! I changed the glass yesterday and it only cost me $2.78 for the glass at the local hardware store. The first piece of molding was a little tricky, but I got all 4 moldings out without breaking any!
What is the name of the glass
This was exactly what I needed! Followed your example and was able to replace a regular pane, plus replaced two panes of antique glass from an extra door we had. Thank you so much for taking the time to make and post this!
This was amazing! The directions were simple and well explained. My little brother put his elbow through our window this morning so you saved my mom money and her patience! Thank you!
Thanks Michael ... i am a single mum living with my son and i had bought the glass and for weeks kept saying to myself to get it repaired ... i had considered hiring a guy to do it but thought i would try myself... so today i searched here and found you ... i hope i can do it now myself as you made it look so easy... if i follow your easy steps il have that glass in and feeling safe and confident enough to do my own diy👍
This video was a life saver. I thought I was going to have to buy a new door. My only issue was that the molding was nailed AND glued in and it was safety glass; it took a while but I got it clean. Ended up having to snap one molding, but I'm pretty sure that can be repaired with wood putty, glue and paint. Much less than a new door. Thanks so much!
Thank you very much for your well explained video!
I went to work right away - used a hook bladed knife and 2 scraper bladed screwdrivers.
I took out the left, right, and bottom moulding pieces only (bottom first) - allowing me to change out the glass without the need to remove the top moulding. (I had 9 panels to replace, saved me some time)
Awesome, Jeff! Glad it helped. That’s a lot of windows!
Great tutorial and simple explanations. Even easy for a "do it yourself" mom like me. I appreciate you showing the use of a variety of tools for those that may not have the same as you. Great Job!
Video from the past helped thousands, it sure helped me today.
I am so GRATEFUL for the generosity of folks like you! I know how to do it, but it was awkward. I have 2 to do and now the second one will be smooth sailing. Thanks so much
My pleasure, Karen. I was very fortunate to have a lot of opportunity to learn growing up. I built a house with my 8th grade son to let him soak it all up. Glad you found a piece of it helpful.
@@michaelbronco What a lovely thing to do, to reply and in such a sweet way. Thanks so much. Gosh, your son is a fortunate guy.
Thank you, Michael. This video is exactly what I needed to replace a window in a door. It was very clear and complete and after seeing it, I was able to do the job with no surprises.
Thank you. This gave me the confidence to try and replace 3 small panes in a large, old front door. I have only one comment: when I started to pry internally, i.e. not pulling it out from the door, but upwards or sidewards, I quickly noticed someone else had put small nails in the past. So the first part was actually pulling those nails out, THEN I could pry out horizontally, outward towards myself (in the video). Thanks again! Went great!
Bravo mate, I've got dozens of these to do, and I think I'll get the hang of it thanks to your awesome teaching.
Glad you found the tips useful. Go slow and take breas in between those windows. Treat each one like its the first!
Thank you! I thought I had to replace the whole door. You just saved me a lot of money!!
I'm so glad I found your video. That's just like my door (1957 built house) Question: how do you measure for the glass? The empty space between the frame is approximately 7.5x11. Thanks.
Once the moulding is removed you'll measure the space in between the frame. I suggest having glass cut an 1/8" small in both directions. That will give you a 1/16" on all sides for expansion / contraction. Hope that helps.
@@michaelbronco
I knew it! I should have not cut classes on my math class.....
Thanks my autistic daughter broke out on of my panes on my back door. Your video saved me so much money thank you so much . Got out molding will replace glass tomorrow
Thank you so much for posting this. I have a similar problem and my contractors were afraid to touch it. Once I saw how you fixed the window, I was able to fix this myself. Thank you very, very much again.
Thanks so much for this. I have nearly the exact same type of door. The last pane that broke I called a glass repair company that charged me nearly $200. Your video made it very easy to replace the pane this time myself for less than $20.
This is EXACTLY what I needed! Not being handy with this kind thing, I had no idea how I was going to get the trim pieces on & off or if I could do it with caulk alone. Perfect! Thanks a million for this upload!!!
Awesome video! I just broke a pane in my door almost identical to the door you were working with. Took me 20 minutes to remove the broken shards and molding...keep in mind my door is from 1941 with a FEW coats of paint
Thank you for covering all details. You are a lot more patient that my husband!
Thanks brother! It was very nice of you to show the rest of us how you do it, as I'm sure it took longer to explain it and film it.
excellent video, i had to break into my own house yesterday. the door is very similar to the one in this video, but mine had decades worth of paint that i get to cut through. side note, now i see just how easy it is to break into my house.
hell yeah! Your instructions came out purrfect for my 80 year old dade county pine door. don't replace with new CRAP fix the good stuff you already have. Thanks a million
Thanks, I thought it would be this easy but it's nice to see all of the extra ways to make the job easier.
Thanks, this really helped - my wife has been on me for a couple of days - I was sure I needed to buy a new door - Thank you again - we live in a century home and she is determined to maintain the appearance of the place.
John
Thank you so much - I am trying to teach my son how to do this, and your video is a big help. You would make an excellent teacher!
Awesome! You just saved me a bunch of money! Now that I know its this easy to replace by myself I'm not waiting any longer to replace our 2 window panels.
This is perfect! Exactly what I needed, short, sweet, and effective: the epitome of how-to videos. 😁 Thank you. You rock.
Dog just broke one of my French door glass, never knew how to take it apart. Thanks for the video.
I noticed that when you were removing the casings that there were not any existing nails. What was holding it in before? Glue? Can you use glue to put back in instead of nails ? Or would that not hold up well? Great and informative video. Looking forward to the glazing methods I have a 114 year old house that has lots of windows in need of repair and I tried to fix the ones were the glazing has deteriorated and I was unsuccessful with the glazing.
This exactly what I needed and this man is so nice.
Elizabeth C Thank you! I try...
@@michaelbronco literally just did this too. Almost ten years later and this video is still helping folks. Thanks for taking the time.
Thank you so much. My grandson had shoved a toy through the pane and I was not sure how to get the wood off without breaking it. You saved me.
Excellent video! You talked us all the way through and answered any questions that may have popped as we did this ourselves and added some extra helpful tips (like the cardboard box for trashing the glass and vacuuming the area B4 you start to continue replacing the glass).
I will be doing my first with more confidence because you took the time to share the knowledge. Thank you very much.
Can't thank you enough for this video. I was just about to try this and really wasn't sure about some of the details. This makes a big difference and I hope I can now avoid some costly mistakes!
Great "Tutorial" this was the first time for me, now I know I can do it by watching you. At least in your video you showed us how to remove the moulding. Thanks👍
Michael, thank you for posting this video. I was stumped as to how the replacement glass was installed. One question, though: won't using nails make it more difficult to remove the molding if the glass breaks again and needs to be replaced? Isn't the pressure created by the four molding pieces on each other be sufficient to hold the glass in place? Or would an adhesive allow you to remove and replace the molding if need be? Thank you for your help.
Nicely done, Michael - both the step-by-step repair and the video quality. Thanks!
Thank you this is so awesome to see how easy it is. I'm one of those who learns by watching.
Thank you! I kept finding videos about glazing/glazed windows but my simple single pane glass windows on my garage doors don't have any of that, just the molding wood and painted. I wasn't sure if I was supposed to use window glaze when setting the glass into the window first like shown on This Old House glazed windows or not before putting in the window molding. Cheers!~
Went 99% well , the last brad was being nailed in when you guessed it !! I tapped the glass with the hammer !!. Had to do it all over.,. but it worked out fine..The glazier gave me a tip, when tapping in the brads, slid the hammer along the glass.. Many thanks for your vid. I'll trawl thru the others now !!, Cheers from Down Under ...
Great tip using the tape to help keep the shards together & not flying through the air. Very well done video & instructions and comments extremely helpful. Thanks!
Great video thank you. 13 years on. Helped me
Excellent video! Learning from a video made 9 years ago! Thank you so much!
Thanks for the video! Took a little stress out of my Saturday.
Very helpful even 9 years later 👍 thanks dude
very good..please do more (old) home improvements and repairs..you tell it like it is! Thank You.
Thanks so much, the video really helped me. In my case though, the trim was glued in at the factory, there were no nails, so it was doubly hard to remove and hard to even believe they were separate pieces of wood. Also, the vertical, longer pieces of trim were mitered, and both of those had to come out first. The horizontal, shorter pieces went all the way from one side to the other, with no miter.
I have the exact same door! and one section broke. I am going to be able to fix this myself so I THANK YOU SO MUCH!!
Thanks for this! This video helped me replace a broken pane in a 1950's door!
Thanks for the great instructions! I was able to save the finishing nails that were already in place and reuse them through the pre-existing nail holes.
Thanks man! Good how to video. I’m still struggling with getting that first piece of molding out, but your double pry technique should do the trick.
Go slow and feel it. You’ll know if you have the correct pressure. Don’t force it.
Glad you didn't destroy the molding. tough to Replace. Just go slow with the push/pull technique. If it's dry, try rubbing some linseed oil and allow it to absorb into the wood first.
Just wanted to say thank you for making this video. It was very helpful.
well made and extremely helpful video. Thank you very much for posting such a useful bit of instruction.
Thank you so much for the show how to. I'm just wondering how I find a piece of glass to replace it.
Any hardware or glass supply store can help you out. Take good measurements.
Realy great detail on the trim removal! Thank you. Subscribed now.
Bronco? That's a badass name and I'm a Charger fan. Also great video just what I needed to know Thanks
Great video and thanks for posting, but one important thing to mention/stress is that antique-ish doors just have the removable moldings on one side ... usually the inside. That is the side one wants to focus their efforts in popping out the moldings. One can waste a lot of effort and damage the permanent/built-in molding by trying in vain to remove it and instead ripping into the door. A novice would not know this and I found out the hard way. Thanks again though for the helpful tips.
We have an antique door and I was trying to remove the pane and started on the inside. It seems like that's going to be the right side, but then I read it should be the other side. I'm really confused! I'm halfway done and worried.
Should have read this comment before starting and have ripped the inside molding off that was part of the door, how did you go about fixing that?
I actually think I can do this myself instead of having to pay a repair man. Thanks for the clear, step by step instructions. Now if I can just get my daughter to stop locking herself out and breaking it again.
Thanks for posting. My son accidentally broke a pane in my garage door today and I was able to replace after watching...
G'day from Melbourne Australia, Thanks for a great vid. i'm off to fix my broken window now !!
Thank you. I was going to hire a contractor but I watched this and did it myself.
Great video, exactly what I needed (the kids busted out 3 panes in one night). One question, What size/length finishing nail are you using? Thanks again
So, how do I know which side of the door to remove the molding from? I see the video it's the outside, but I see comments that say the inside. Now I'm scared to try for fear of tearing up my door. One of the 4 windows at the top is broken, so it would be very noticeable.
A huge help. Thank you for such a clear, simple and safe instruction video
Man I needed this video- Now what do you call the wood trim that goes around it. Mine was pretty old and I need to replace it.
Thank you!!! New home owner, single mom. Appreciate it.
So glad I watched this going to try and get the molding off in one piece now, I had resigned myself to having to break it!
Excellent video. Could you glue in the molding?
Michael! thanks a ton! about to get started right now. That porch looks pretty much exactly like ours.
My pleasure Aric, glad you found the video useful. Best of luck.
Thanks for posting this video. While there's plenty of info out there about putty-glazed windows, there's not a lot about windows with wood molding.
I've got weathered, 80-year-old pane windows with mitered molding. I'm about to take them apart, clean them up, and put them back together. So I'm trying to figure out how to do it right. We get a lot of weather here -- strong sun, lots of freeze-thaw cycles, lots of rain, lots of condensation running down the inside of the window.
I've been thinking of using a bead of linseed-based putty front and back to create a seal between the glass on both sides and the (primed) wood (instead of the acryl caulk). Have any words of wisdom for me on this approach?
Excellent Video! I'm going to attempt to replace a pane today - Thanks 👍!
Thank you so much. You saved the day here at our house
Nice job I’ve been doing this kind of work for 35yrs i would not change a thing.
Thanks a MILLION buddy!!... From a parent of 3 badass teenagers with BB guns who rents instead of owns, and happens to be going through this very situation right now,, this information is INVALUABLE! 😁👍
Glad this helped! BB guns and glass don't typically get along.
This is exactly what I need to do. I guess my only question is how do I know what size pain I actually need. Like, should it be about 1/16” larger, on all sides, beyond what will ultimately be visible, generally? Also, is there a general glass thickness that is commonly used?
This is exactly what I needed! Thank you alot for sharing!
can you replace the glass with insulated or is there not enough room? I would assume if possible the trim would have to be all replaced. Thank you for the great video.
Typically the exterior is the one to remove. Inside is permanent. I suggest drawing a picture of the window and labeling the diagram: L/top R/lower, etc..Then remove one window at a time and mark each piece so you know where it goes. Wrap once with masking tape and label the tape to correspond with the diagram. Measure each window carefully and have the guys at the hardware cut and wrap each piece so you can label the wrap. Pretty good bet that the windows will be slightly different.
If I removed the wrong side of the door, the side that was part of the door, how would you go about fixing that?
When removing the first piece, how were you able to pull it forward if it had nails in it?
Needed this so thank you. I'd probably drill the pilot holes in the molding before putting them up. Drilling with that glass insert there could break it. I'd probably also lay down the bead of caulk before setting the molding, not after.
Thanks Michael - really well explained - great video !!!
Great video with clear, concise instructions. Will be using your guidelines in restoring an original door (with one broken glass frame) from my 1895 farmhouse restoration project here in my home in Mississippi. Thanks so much for the great advice and instruction you provided.
Thank you! How do you determine what side the molding in on? I feel like ours MAY be on the inside??
Good Video. I was wondering why you didn't re apply the mastic / glazing compound.
Hey amazing video! Really helped me understanding how to do it, but i have a question, instead of nails can i use just some wood glue for the frame? Or isn't safe? Cuz my window is like 1.20cm tall, a bit heavier
Wood glue would work but you’d never be able to replace the window.
@@michaelbronco Probably had to replace all frame if i need to replace it right? Sorry for my English
You just saved me a ton of money. Thank you!