Welcome to Adamov Reglazing, your trusted partner for bathtub reglazing and cabinet refinishing services in Southern California. We proudly serve residential and commercial clients across multiple locations, helping you revitalize your bathrooms and kitchens with cost-effective, professional solutions.
We just wrapped a shower stall reglazing job in Moreno Valley, and this one had a nice mix of repair and refinish work to it. The owner was planning to put in new shower doors, so before any of that could happen, he asked us to take out the old frame and doors. That’s where we started — pulling the whole old door assembly off so we had a clean shower stall to work with.
Once the frame and doors were out, the real prep began. The first thing I dealt with was the silicone. There was old silicone left on the surface, and that all has to come off — you can’t lay a clean finish over brittle, dirty caulk. So I removed every bit of the remaining silicone from the surface and got it back to bare material.
Then there were the holes. When you take out an old shower door frame, you’re left with the screw holes where it was anchored into the walls. You can’t just leave those open. Water will find its way right into them, get behind the surface, and start causing damage you won’t see until it’s a real problem. So before that stall ever sees water again, I filled all the holes with fiberglass filler and brought them back flush and solid. Sealing those up properly is one of those steps that doesn’t show in the final photos but makes all the difference down the road.
With the silicone gone and the holes filled, I moved into the deep cleaning. Every bit of soap scum, grime, dust from the work, all of it had to come off so the new coating would have a clean surface to bond to. While I was going over the stall, I found a couple of scratches on the wall and took care of those too, smoothing them out so they wouldn’t telegraph through the finish. Little details like that are what separate a real refinish from a quick spray job.
After the cleaning and repairs, I ran a fresh bead of caulk all the way around the shower to seal it up. That does two things — it gives the stall a clean, finished look, and more importantly it locks out water at every seam where the surface meets the walls and floor. A shower lives or dies on staying watertight, so getting that seal right before the coating goes on matters.
Then came the masking. I taped and covered the old fixtures, the walls, the ceiling, and the floor — everything outside the stall that I didn’t want touched. Shower refinishing throws a fine overspray that drifts and settles on any surface it can reach, so I seal the room off completely before spraying. After that I set up my ventilation, like I always do, to pull the fumes and overspray out of the space during the spraying process and keep them out of the rest of the house. That keeps the air clean while I work and keeps the home comfortable.
With the room sealed off and the air moving, I sprayed the bright white finish across the whole stall. That’s the payoff. The shower went from a worn surface full of old silicone, open holes, and scratches to a smooth, glossy, bright white finish that looked brand new. Once his new doors go on against that fresh surface, it’s going to look like a completely remodeled shower.
This job was in Moreno Valley, but we handle shower stall reglazing and shower refinishing all over Riverside, San Bernardino, and Orange County. Whether you’re swapping doors, dealing with scratches and old caulk, or just want a clean, modern finish, reglazing brings your shower back for a fraction of what a remodel costs. We give honest estimates and we’ll always tell you straight what it’ll take to do it right.
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