Greetings! We can't believe it has been almost a year since we last posted an update from Greenwreath - the time has flown! Between work, the house, the pets, and a myriad of other excuses, there never seems to be a moment to sit down and write a post. We promise we will try to do better, starting with the den...
The den has probably been the most lived-in room since we moved in, and after a year of staring at bowing walls, water-stained floors and windows so crooked they looked like they were scowling at us, we decided it was finally time to tackle whatever nightmare was lying in wait beneath.
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The den before we started |
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Rotten floors |
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The mantle, no longer attached to the wall |
I happened to go away for the weekend to visit my parents, so naturally, as soon as I left, Garreth called Jason over to start this little project. This is what I came home to...
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I was only gone for 4 days. |
We found a weird, botched-together assortment of timbers, rotten siding, evidence of a fire, destruction caused by our pesky little friend, the termite, and we even learned that the windows we now have were not original. The way the present framing cuts into the cross-pieces, it appears the original windows were much smaller. The three ghost marks running up the chimney face are the outlines of studs that used to hold the drywall in place over the brick. What was left of them fell out when the drywall came down.
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What is going on in here? |
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Burned sill |
Jason returned in the fall, after he milled new siding, to finish gutting and replacing the walls...
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Lola, always helpful |
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Starting to re-frame. |
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Olive the Cat and Lucy T. Basset Hound inspecting the new work |
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New siding! |
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The end of the work day... |
Jason re-uses everything he can save, so the siding going back onto the house consists of a mix of newly-milled and salvageable original. You might also have noticed that some of the timber remaining in the wall is not exactly structural or necessary. It is always an excellent idea when replacing so much of the original structure, to leave remnants of the old so that anyone in the future can hopefully tell what exactly the house has been through. We wouldn't want to erase all that history of change. Check back to see how it turns out in the next installation!
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