- Aug 10, 2002
- 5,847
- 154
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GF and I are mulling some ideas for a kitchen update. Kitchen has the original sink installed in the house in the 1920s. While washing dishes one day, I dropped a dish and chipped some of the enamel exposing the bare iron underneath. The sink cannot stay this way forever as the iron will rust out, plus it looks unsightly.
I've been browsing CL and looking for a replacement sink. The dimensions of this sink apparently are not as common as I thought so to replace it with a good match is hard.
Repairing the sink in the form of reglazing is the other option. There are kits for a DIY job or a professional can be called. Anyone ever do this? What kind of results can be expected?
We may end up junking the sink anyway because we want to redesign the kitchen entirely. The sink is an old style complete with a flat attached dishboard to the side which is used for drying dishes. Wondering if the reglazing is worth it for a sink we may end up discarding in a few years anyway.
I've been browsing CL and looking for a replacement sink. The dimensions of this sink apparently are not as common as I thought so to replace it with a good match is hard.
Repairing the sink in the form of reglazing is the other option. There are kits for a DIY job or a professional can be called. Anyone ever do this? What kind of results can be expected?
We may end up junking the sink anyway because we want to redesign the kitchen entirely. The sink is an old style complete with a flat attached dishboard to the side which is used for drying dishes. Wondering if the reglazing is worth it for a sink we may end up discarding in a few years anyway.