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Hard_Celery t1_ja3rz8i wrote

Add 1x2's to the stud then 3/4" drywall that should be 1.5"

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Syndicofberyl t1_ja408p7 wrote

Bring the existing wall up to be 1/2" from flush with the frame. Then your drywall will cover the remaining depth.

How in the hell did the door end up so much thicker than the wall

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surfeat t1_ja45bii wrote

The door frame should be reset deeper into the studs.

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2001sleeper t1_ja4acqn wrote

Looks like the wrong door. Only option to keep the door is to build out wall to match.

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TheOtherSide5840 t1_ja4nekp wrote

I would install a piece of trim to cover the door latch / lock holes. If installing trim around the door make sure the trim is wide enough to support the trim. Paint white to match door trim. Install the drywall first and then the trim will cover the edge of the drywall.

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PLEASEHIREZ t1_ja5icli wrote

Depends on where this is in the home and how much you want to spend. If it were me, I'd just build out the curvature if the wall (if it's not somewhere important), and hang the drywall with its natural flex.

Alternatively, why not just build out the door frame section, then drywall that. Think vertical bulwark?

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energysector t1_ja6dwyb wrote

What does the finish on the outside look like? You could take the door out, trim the jamb to fit the 2x4 wall, and rehang it.

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Hack-of-all-trades61 t1_ja7ecvu wrote

Appears to be a very old garage. Could be the framing is a full 4” and a standard “4-inch” door was too small. That would explain why a 6” door sticks out 1.5”. I can think of 2 reasonable options.

  1. remove the door frame and disassemble it. Trim off the excess 1” from the outside edge- furthest from the hinge cutouts. Reassemble and reinstall. Maybe that’s not so reasonable after all.

  2. it looks like there’s enough room between the door and the light switch to simply box it out. Rip a stud to the desired thickness. 1” if it’s 1.5 out. Screw it to the stud closest to the frame, add from the frame into it. (This will make your door more secure. As it is, a not very hard kick is splitting the door frame open.) then drywall a funny-looking corner. If you can’t find skinny enough door trim- rip that as well.

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inkseep1 t1_ja80p8e wrote

You still need to put trim around the finished door after you put in drywall. There isn't a reason that trim cannot be extra thick. You could put up the drywall, add 2x material or whatever makes up the gap and then add the normal trim on top of that. Then you just paint like normal and the casual observer will not really pay much attention to how it was done. It will look fine from my house.

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