Composite doors have coloured skins rather than a coloured coating on their surface. This means that their colour is long-lasting and they don’t need repainting. If you want to change the colour of your composite door it’s best to ask the manufacturer about the best way to do this. This is because different composite doors are finished in different ways.
Tarbert
Tarbert is a village in the west of Scotland, in the Argyll and also Bute council location. It is built around East Loch Tarbert, an inlet of Loch Fyne, and extends over the isthmus which connects the peninsula of Kintyre to Knapdale and West Loch Tarbert. Tarbert had a recorded population of 1,338 in the 2001 Census. Tarbert has a long history both as a harbour and as a strategic point guarding accessibility to Kintyre as well as the Inner Hebrides. The name Tarbert is the anglicised type of the Gaelic word tairbeart, which literally translates as "carrying across" and also describes the narrowest strip of land between two bodies of water over which goods or whole watercrafts can be carried (portage). In past times freights were discharged from vessels berthed in one loch, hauled over the isthmus to the various other loch, packed onto vessels berthed there as well as shipped forward, allowing seafarers to avoid the sail around the Mull of Kintyre. Tarbert was anciently part of the Gaelic overkingdom of Dál Riata and also secured by three castles-- in the village centre, ahead of the West Loch, as well as on the south side of the East Loch. The spoil of the last of these castles, Tarbert Castle, still exists as well as dominates Tarbert's horizon. Around the year 1098 Magnus Barefoot, King of Norway, had his longship carried throughout the isthmus at Tarbert to signify his belongings of the Western Isles. Despite its difference as a tactical garrison throughout the Middle Ages, Tarbert's socioeconomic prosperity came during the Very early Modern duration, as the port became an angling town. At its height, the Loch Fyne herring fishery attracted thousands of vessels to Tarbert.