Hello,
My question for my fine feathered friends here, is, Would left over formica laminate work in the application for a whiteboard?
I recently converted my old bedroom into a home office/study of sorts, and one of the things I wanted to do was have a white board. And the thought came to my mind, that I could perhaps use a piece of Formica I had lying around for this purpose. Its nothing special, just plain white formica you would use on counter tops(I used it on my router table.) The sheet is a few inches less than 4ft^2 since I need to cut out a cracked spot near an edge, and clean up the edges where the butchers at lowes chipped it out on the Panel saw.
Now I realize this probably isn't the greatest material, however I was wondering if it would work decently for this purpose. Meaning it could be erased/cleaned, without leaving behind too much ghosting.
This isn't really a woodworking project perse, since I do intend to probably just mount it the the wall using a couple roofing nails hammered into studs(big heads) since the stuff isn't heavy at all. However it is a project, and you folks are extremly knowledgeable.
Many thanks.
Cheers,
Brendan
My question for my fine feathered friends here, is, Would left over formica laminate work in the application for a whiteboard?
I recently converted my old bedroom into a home office/study of sorts, and one of the things I wanted to do was have a white board. And the thought came to my mind, that I could perhaps use a piece of Formica I had lying around for this purpose. Its nothing special, just plain white formica you would use on counter tops(I used it on my router table.) The sheet is a few inches less than 4ft^2 since I need to cut out a cracked spot near an edge, and clean up the edges where the butchers at lowes chipped it out on the Panel saw.
Now I realize this probably isn't the greatest material, however I was wondering if it would work decently for this purpose. Meaning it could be erased/cleaned, without leaving behind too much ghosting.
This isn't really a woodworking project perse, since I do intend to probably just mount it the the wall using a couple roofing nails hammered into studs(big heads) since the stuff isn't heavy at all. However it is a project, and you folks are extremly knowledgeable.
Many thanks.
Cheers,
Brendan