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Tips regarding railing and trellis for newly sanded stairs.
The year has come when things need to be pieced together a bit
.
I would love to have some tips and suggestions on how to solve the trellis and staircase railing for the newly sanded stairs (it actually happened 2 years ago). But it's starting to feel a little extra irritating now that most things around, such as walls, ceilings, doors, floors, etc., are starting to come together.
The picture below is taken from http://www.dromtrappor.se/sv/Tidlosa-trappor/ as a reference. We want a clean and simple design for the whole thing, and this thing with white-painted round bars actually turned out really nice,

And so over to our reality
. The camera is not quite 100, so the pictures reflect that, but bear with us.
The trellis down to the basement:
There must be some form of railing here, but the question is whether we should really go from floor to ceiling, or take the opportunity to make it more airy and just go a bit up and break with an oak handrail? I also thought of making the skirting board in oak. Then some adjustable 12v spotlights should also be mounted on the old ceiling molding, I think that could be quite effective.
The railing down to the basement:
The original is a 3.5-meter-long pine round bar (diameter 45mm). I was thinking of something similar but in oak.
The underside of the stairs hasn't been fixed yet, but it will be lightly sanded and then probably oiled. The steps down to the basement will eventually also be clad in oak (considering something like a step kit or similar).



Then we have the trellis up to the upper floor (currently removed):
Alt1. Match the solution above.
Alt2. Skip having anything whatsoever and patch up the floor.

One thought is to also mount some adjustable 12v spotlights in the old ceiling molding (during a quick test, we thought it looked good anyway).

The railing on the upper floor should simply follow the other.

The stairs and floor are lacquered with Bona Naturale 2-component.

Do you have any good tips, suggestions, and ideas to share?
I would love to have some tips and suggestions on how to solve the trellis and staircase railing for the newly sanded stairs (it actually happened 2 years ago). But it's starting to feel a little extra irritating now that most things around, such as walls, ceilings, doors, floors, etc., are starting to come together.
The picture below is taken from http://www.dromtrappor.se/sv/Tidlosa-trappor/ as a reference. We want a clean and simple design for the whole thing, and this thing with white-painted round bars actually turned out really nice,

And so over to our reality
The trellis down to the basement:
There must be some form of railing here, but the question is whether we should really go from floor to ceiling, or take the opportunity to make it more airy and just go a bit up and break with an oak handrail? I also thought of making the skirting board in oak. Then some adjustable 12v spotlights should also be mounted on the old ceiling molding, I think that could be quite effective.
The railing down to the basement:
The original is a 3.5-meter-long pine round bar (diameter 45mm). I was thinking of something similar but in oak.
The underside of the stairs hasn't been fixed yet, but it will be lightly sanded and then probably oiled. The steps down to the basement will eventually also be clad in oak (considering something like a step kit or similar).



Then we have the trellis up to the upper floor (currently removed):
Alt1. Match the solution above.
Alt2. Skip having anything whatsoever and patch up the floor.

One thought is to also mount some adjustable 12v spotlights in the old ceiling molding (during a quick test, we thought it looked good anyway).

The railing on the upper floor should simply follow the other.

The stairs and floor are lacquered with Bona Naturale 2-component.

Do you have any good tips, suggestions, and ideas to share?
I have almost decided not to complicate things and therefore to make a white-painted trellis that extends from floor to ceiling with supports and possibly also a top piece in oak. I have experimented a bit with the dimensions of the slats themselves and it will probably be a square 40x40mm that will be rounded with the router somewhat. The gap between the slats seems to have a maximum of 10cm if I have understood it correctly? In the top piece, 12v spotlights of some variant will be installed to cast light both on the trellis and various places depending on the angle (I have prepared with transformers beforehand).
I would still be grateful for some opinions.


I would still be grateful for some opinions.


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