Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Make Shoji Paper Doors

Shoji doors make light, inexpensive doors for closets or room dividers.


Shoji screens feature thick, fibrous paper glued securely between hardwood grids. The paper is thick enough that it provides privacy, but thin enough to allow light to shine through. In Japan, rooms made of shoji screens require few lamps because the paper reflects a warm, cozy glow. You, too, can create shoji doors to divide rooms, replace doors, or simply decorate walls. Does this Spark an idea?


Instructions


1. Measure the height and width of the doorway you wish to cover, using a yardstick. Include the door molding in your measurements. If you want a truly Asian look, you'll want the door to cover the molding as well.


2. Cut two pieces of cardboard matching your measurements, using a utility knife. A door 6 feet high and 18 inches wide with a 3-inch molding all around requires a piece of cardboard 39 inches (6 feet, 3 inches) high and 30 inches wide.


3. Draw a grid on your cardboard consisting of 4-inch-wide, 6-inch-high rectangles spaced about ½ inch apart. Leave a 1-inch border of cardboard all the way around the edge. Cut out the rectangles with a utility knife. Work slowly to avoid wavy lines and torn cardboard.


4. Spray-paint the cardboard black. Spray-paint each piece on both sides. Let each coat of black paint dry for two hours before applying another coat or flipping the cardboard over. Let the totally painted cardboard cure overnight.


5. Lay one of your cardboard grids on the ground. Smear the grid with glue. Unroll a sheet of vellum parchment, rice paper or shoji paper onto the grid. Press down gently where the glue is. Glue the other grid on top of the paper so that the edges of the grids line up exactly. Allow the glue to dry overnight.


6. Spray-paint two pieces of aluminum U railing black. Allow them to dry overnight. U railing looks like a square tube missing one side. It's often used to create sliding doors.


7. Screw one piece of U railing into the floor at the base of your door. Screw the other into the wall right above the door molding. Slip the top and bottom edges of the shoji door into the U railings. It should slide easily.







Tags: door molding, high inches, high inches wide, inches wide, utility knife, your cardboard