Wood Siding For Homes

Wood Siding For Homes

Wood Siding


The Selection, Log Rack Storage and Use Of Wood For Your Home Fire

A beautiful wood burning fire in your fireplace takes the chill out of the air and provides the perfect atmosphere for a relaxing and enjoyable opportunity to daydream while staring into the fire.

 

To create a beautiful fire you need to start with quality firewood.  The best type of wood to burn is hardwood.  Their density allows them to burn cleaner and longer.  Some hardwoods include birch, alder, oak, maple, ash and beech.  Wood from a fruit tree such as cherry tends to burn with a most pleasant smell.

 

Your wood should be properly prepared.  Finding and storing your logs is important.  The best wood to burn has been aged for a year.  Unseasoned wood will smolder and not produce the desired amount of heat.  Seasoned wood will produce a hot, crackling and efficient fire.  A well seasoned log is dark or gray on the outside and when split is white on the inside.

 

When purchasing wood here are the guidelines on quantity:

 

            Cord: a stack approximately 4’H X 4’D X 8’L

            Face Cord:  4’H X 8’L and something less than 4’D

            Full-sized pick-up truck tightly stacked to the top of the cab – approximately 1 cord

            Full-sized pick-up truck tightly stacked to the top of the box – 2/3 of a cord

            Small sized pickup stacked to top of the box – 1/3 of a cord

 

These measurements are only approximate. Pick-up truckloads vary due to the size of the bed and how tightly the wood is packed.  A cord could actually take two pick-up loads if not loaded tightly.

 

Store your wood outside.  Purchase a log rack to hold and protect the logs.  This allows the air to circulate under the pile.  When wood is stacked directly on the ground it will absorb moisture from the ground and the bottom layer will tend to rot.  To dry properly it should be kept dry and out of the weather.  Once it is dry keep it covered to protect it from the weather.  Bring the wood into the house a few days before you build your fire to help removed any remaining moisture.

 

To build your fire, use plenty of crumpled newspaper and kindling.  A great kindling to use is fatwood.  It is 100” natural wood harvested from the stump of softwood, the best wood for kindling.  Fatwood is non-toxic, environmentally friendly, easy to use, burns extremely hot and only takes a few sticks to start the fire. 

 

After placing the newspaper and kindling in the fireplace tightly stack at least three pieces or more of wood in your fireplace in a crisscross arrangement.  A tightly packed pile of wood burns more slowly.  Light your kindling and watch your fire grow.  Once the fire is burning there will be times when you will need your fireplace tools to rearrange the logs as they shift and burn down.  That’s where your fireplace poker and tongs come in handy.  And afterwards, once the ashes are cold, cleanup is easily accomplished with your fireplace shovel and brush. 

 

Wood Siding For Homes

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List Price: $17.95
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A home's appeal depends a great deal on its exterior paint or stain, brick- and stonework, siding, trims, and other details - and it's not just the type of finish that's important, it's also how well the job was done. This first-ever compilation by Fine Homebuilding on the popular subject provides builders with ideas for choosing the correct finishes for home exteriors, plus solid how-to information.

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Authors David and Jeannie Stiles give readers all the information they need to build their own cabins -- whether it be as a wilderness retreat or a backyard studio. The authors describe each step in the process from buying land to obtaining services, from finding qualified construction help to deciding on and developing plans for a structure that suits their lifestyle and budget. "Cabins" is packed with detailed illustrations, plans and common-sense advice. Chapters include classic construction methods: how to build a log cabin, pole-built and stick-built cabin, post-and-beam, stone, cordwood and kit cabins. Construction methods are clearly illustrated in photographs and drawings and the advantages of each are explained in detail. Foundations, windows, doors, insulation, roofing, installing utilities, water and sanitary systems and heating are all discussed. Many designs are presented as inspiration and to help readers select the cabin that is perfect for them: homesteader log cabin, writing cabin, guest cabin, Japanese moon-gazing cabin, lakeside retreat, pyramid and A-frame, and hillside Mediterranean cabin. The authors include personal reminiscences from successful builders and cabin owners, and discuss furnishings and accessories that can help readers get the most enjoyment out of their newly built wilderness retreat.

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Adolph Lewisohn, requiring a staff of forty to minister to his guests' comfort in the wilds of the Adirondacks, imported to his camp a major-domo, barber, caddy, chess-player, singing teacher, and two chauffeurs, Majorie Merriweather Post made do with eighty-five servants for the sixty-five building of Topridge, which was approached by a private funicular railway and graced by a Russian dacha a token of affection for her third husband, a former ambassador to the Soviet Union.Equally magnificent was J.P. Morgan's Camp Uncas, Julius Bache's Wenonah Lodge, and William Seward Webb's Nehasane. These 'Great Camps' were to the beautiful and secluded Adirondack region what the 'Cottages' were to Newport: contradictions in terminology, but marvels of construction and architectural imagination. Truly fabulous structures, built primarily of wood and stone and set deep among the great forests, they are at once relics of a bygone age and prototypes for the contemporary architect, amateur builder, and historian.Harvey Kaiser traces the history of the Adirondacks from their first sighting by a European in 1535, through the eras of trapping, iron mining, and lumbering, to the development of railroad and steamboat lines that led to the influx of tourists and the building of the 'Great Camps.' The sixty years from 1870 to 1930 were the heyday of these camps, the 'Gilded Age' of the Adirondacks, and Kaiser give a fascinating account both of the personalities who engineered and financed these fabulous structures and of the buildings themselves...More than forty years after the Depression put an end to this princely life-style, the camps themselves are threatened by the forces of politics and nature. In Great Camps of the Adirondacks, Harvey Kaiser make a strong case for preservation: the obliteration of these remarkable structures would be an irreparable loss not only to our architectural heritage but to every individual to whom they are a resource and an inspiration.

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This well-illustrated guide offers a range of building options, with complete instructions and plans for four popular projects: saltbox potting shed, garden storage shed, storage barn, and lean-to tool locker. Author Joe Truini walks the reader through each step, from evaluating storage needs to basic construction to putting the finishing touches on the roof. Over 350 color photos and black-and-white illustrations are included.

Residential Design Using Revit Architecture 2009
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This book was designed for the architectural student new to Revit Architecture 2009. This text takes a project based approach to learning Revit Architecture in which the student develops a single family residence all the way to photo-realistic renderings like the one on the cover. Each book comes with a DVD containing numerous video presentations of the written material. This book starts with a basic introduction to hand sketching techniques and concepts intended to increase your ability to sketch design ideas by hand and to think three-dimensionally. The lessons then begin with an introduction to Revit Architecture 2009. The first four chapters are intended to get the reader familiar with the user interface and many of the common menus and tools. Throughout the rest of the book a residential building is created and the many tools and features of Revit Architecture 2009 are covered in greater detail. Using step-by-step tutorial lessons, the residential project is followed through to create elevations, sections, floor plans, renderings, construction sets, etc. The videos contained on the included DVD make it easy to see the menu selections and will make learning Revit Architecture straightforward and simple. Throughout the book the reader is presented with icons indicating that a video file is available on the DVD for viewing. Each video is a short presentation on that particular subject. Table of Contents Introduction - Sketching Exercises 1. Getting Started with Revit Architecture 2009 2. Lake Cabin: Floor Plan (The Basics) 3. Overview of Linework and Modify Tools 4. Drawing 2D Architectural Objects 5. Residence: Floor Plan (First Floor) 6. Residence: Floor Plans (Second Floor & Basement Plans) 7. Residence: Roof 8. Residence: Floor systems & Reflected Ceiling Plans 9. Residence: Elevations 10. Residence: Sections 11. Residence: Floor Plan Features 12. Residence: Schedules 13. Residence: Photo-Realistic Renderings 14. Residence: Construction Document Set Appendix A - Engineering Graphics

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