Making a take-out window
How to modify screens for easy opening
By Penny Caldwell

Tired of running back and forth from the deck to the nearest door when you need the ketchup, another cold drink, sunscreen, your book, or other essentials from inside the cottage? If your screens are the kind that are held in place with hooks and eyes, here's an easy renovation to turn your window into a takeout counter.
First, determine which side of the screen you want to be hinged (remember that it will always open
outwards). Remove the hooks and eyes from that side. To keep the screen from becoming hinge-bound or scuffing
on the bottom, fit it loosely into the window opening before you install the hinges. Then slide two putty
knives or other thin spacers between the sill and the bottom of the window to maintain a narrow gap while you
mark the placement of the hinges, which should be about a quarter of the way from the top and bottom of the
screen. Put a handle on each side of the screen for easy opening and closing and, voilà , you're done. You
can latch the screen closed by doing up the remaining hooks and eyes.
—Penny Caldwell
Published in the March 2002 issue of Cottage Life magazine.



