Pivot glass door online shopping by glass-door.us right now? Grilles for divided lites are inserted between glass panes, making window care a breeze. You can still buy this type of door for a premium, but most manufacturers sell more doors with faux divided lites. These have snap-in wood grilles or grills placed between the panels of dual glazing (see photo at left). They imitate the look but are less expensive to make and are easier to clean than true divided lites. Some grille configurations create an evenly-spaced gridwork of lites in pairs: 6, 8, 10 or 12 lites. Others stack horizontally-shaped panes, yielding 4, 5, or 6 horizontal lites. Still others divide the glass into interesting patterns or designs that imitate certain architectural styles, such as Craftsman (see photo below).
If you don’t have a groove cut into your door, you can use a type of guide that hugs the bottom of the door, like this C-guide. There are fixed sizes, or an adjustable option for uncommon thicknesses so you can get an exact fit. Lastly, if you don’t want to drill your floor, you can use a wall-mounted sliding door guide. It slides under and around the door and is attached to the wall. As the door slides, a wheel rolls it along to keep it positioned correctly. All of these options do the same thing – it is up to you to choose the guide that works best for your application. Just don’t go without one!
Sliding glass doors are super smashable. To deter intruders, we suggest applying a window film. This polyethylene coating keeps a shattered sliding glass door from completely falling apart, making it more difficult for an unwelcome visitor to enter. Just to be clear, burglars aren’t our main concern with sliding glass doors. We’ve read multiple interviews with former thieves, and most say they liked to enter a home in the least obtrusive way possible. So thieves aren’t likely to smash your sliding door, but vandals and other types of intruders might. See additional information on mirror barn door.
Pick from four finishes when choosing a barn door for a unique, customized look that amplifies your style. If you want a natural and untreated look, stick with an unfinished barn door. If you want to highlight the deep, natural color of your wood, choose a stained barn door for years of beauty. If you intend to paint your barn door in the future, go for an already primed door, so you don’t have to prime it yourself. For a completely primed and finished option that is ready to go, select a painted barn door.
All our doors are made of toughened/tempered glass. Tempered glass is a type of safety glass processed by controlled thermal or chemical treatments to increase its strength compared with normal glass. Tempering puts the outer surfaces into compression and the interior into tension. Such stresses cause the glass, when broken, to crumble into small granular chunks instead of splintering into jagged shards as plate glass (annealed glass) does. The granular chunks are less likely to cause injury. Find even more info on glass-door.us.