sliding glass doors on craigslist

sliding glass doors on craigslist

sliding glass doors nashville

Sliding Glass Doors On Craigslist

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Now you can Subscribe using RSS North America, Tiny House Living, USA Josh is excited to finally have the front door installed. And yes, we know our house wrap is on upside down. Oh windows and doors. Except for when I have to install them, and then I hate them. Ok, maybe not hate. But they are annoyingly time consuming with the flashing and the rough openings and the trim. And like just about everything else on the tiny house build, it took a bit longer to install all the windows that we initially anticipated. And while we are certainly not experts, we know a lot more about window installation now than we did a few weeks ago. So check out how we did it and feel free to have a chuckle at our misadventures. Alisha installing window trim on the very last nice day before it got permanently cold. First off, all of our windows and doors are used. Well, not all are strictly "used," but none of them were custom ordered. All but one we bought off of craigslist and the the one we didn't was a sample from a local window company.




Even that window was supposed to be one we got off Craigslist, but when it came time to install we realized it just wasn't going to work and had to scramble to find one that was a similar size to the opening we had created. We still had to alter that opening a bit to fit, but that's really nothing new. Our first fully finished side! Caulked window and all! See, I don't know if we measured incorrectly or cut 2x4's incorrectly or my dad laid it out in Solid Works [3D engineering software that we used draw up our plans] incorrectly (we're going with this one if only to make ourselves feel less foolish), but probably half of our windows openings were wrong, which we didn't realize until it came time to flash and install them. So that was fun. Headers had to be cut and moved up or down, boards had to be inserted to decrease opening widths, it was a mess. Plus we didn't get the advice to slant our sills downward to encourage water from sitting until after we had already built the walls, so we had to get creative with 1/4" board and/or a belt sander before the flashing went on.




Flashing around our front door. Flashing at the top of our sliding glass door. Keepin' it (water) tight! And because we used non custom windows, we got creative with a few and did something the manufacturers would frown and shake their heads at: we turned some of them sideways to be long instead of tall. With most it wasn't a big deal. A couple we had to remove the springs inside, not too difficult, and some will have to have small drain holes drilled in them to ensure water doesn't collect in the tracks at the new "bottom," but I'm pretty sure it'll be fine. Ask me in a few months. We went with 45 degree corner angles on the window trim. Not because they were easier, but because I prefer how they look to straight boards. We used a self adhesive aluminum flashing, which just happened to be what the nearest building supply store had in stock. It worked well until it got cold and then we had to break out a hair dryer (a super handy construction tool) to warm it up enough to make it stick.




But I'm pretty sure we did it wrong. It's hard to say. YouTube videos do not an expert make, no matter how many you watch. In any case, I think we went through 5 rolls of the stuff, and everything looked pretty sealed up, so I'm satisfied. But I do have to keep turning off the "just get it done!" voice in my head by telling myself that this is my home and it has to be done right. I'm a very goal-oriented person and I do tend to sacrifice quality in order to hurry to the finish line. Do it once, do it right. Probably should have started reciting that mantra during frame building... We caulked the wider joints and just painted over the smaller gaps with our primer/paint combo. After the windows were installed we hung the window and door trim. It seemed like it would be easier to attach the siding and then cut holes for windows through the rough window openings (we'd seen this done a few times), but between the type of windows we had, not wanting the trim to stick out too far and get us in trouble down the road, and trying to figure out the flashing




, we went with installing the windows, then the trim, then just doing a lot of measuring for the siding. It took two solid days to get it all up. But when we did we could stand back and say it was actually starting to look like a house! Windows and window trim on the tall side of the tiny before we added the glass panels in the sliding glass door frame. One thing I did notice, though, was that windows that looked huge in the garage or sketched out on plans appeared to take up much less room once they were hung and blocked by siding. Next time I won't be afraid to go a little bigger, but I'm still happy with size and placement, especially with our big glass doors! I initially wanted two sets of French doors opposite each other, but we ended up going with one sliding glass door that we paid $20 for on Craigslist and a glass door from the ReStore ($15). The sliding glass door we still need to get new hardware for because the previous own didn't have keys anymore and we had to build a door jamb and install a handle and deadbolt on the glass front door, so it did take a bit more time and energy, but doors are expensive, so monetarily speaking I think we still came out on top.




Contents © 2016 TerraDrift, Blogger Templates Designed By Templateism | Distributed By Blogger TemplatesIt's midnight when the ad for a hardwood basketball floor appearsJoel Allen, 30, has been hitting the Refresh button for hours searching for something, Now the moment he's been waiting for has arrived. Though it's streaked with red lines, the floor's a real gem. free but could easily go for $2,000 at $11-$12 per square foot. The owner is desperate to get rid of it, and Allen's convinced it's all he needs to finish his project. Allen isn't building a house. He's building a secret cabin deep in the woods of Whistler, British Columbia. No one knows the egg-shaped treehouse exists, and Joel likes itThe treehouse is being built on "crown," or government land without a permit, and while he doubts this will get him arrested, he'd prefer not to chance it. Whistler is a rich person's playground just two hours north ofIt has world-class skiing, mountain climbing and




But it's also a place where low-income workers increasingly can't afford to live. This is why Allen is building the cabin. He wants a "secret little loft" to call his own. Back in 2006, Allen, then 26, quit his day job as a software developer to pursue his dream of an early retirement. building a beautiful egg-shaped treehouse ("The Hemloft") instead, using $10,000 worth of free materials he found on In an interview, the self-taught carpenter explained how he did During the first season of building the treehouse in 2009, Allen spent $6,500 on the roof and frame. "Nothing was flat, so I knew the finishing stages would be more"After the first season, I could hardly afford to continue because it was so pricey. The place sat in a holding pattern for nearly two years." But searching for a couch on Craigslist's free section got Allen thinking about what else he might find there. repurposing valuable, broken materials like a double sliding




glass door (valued at $400) into windows, and an ash hardwood floor (valued at $7 per square foot; $1,500 total) into a "I started trolling, pressing Refresh twice a minute, and getting really competitive about it. A lot of people in Vancouver were getting rid of amazing things, but you had to act fast," he Part of Allen's goal was not to build something off the grid "in ramshackle fashion," like so many of the alternative homes he'd seen in Whistler, left to desecration. "I wanted to build something beautiful with good materials," he"I wanted a place that was nice and though it was on government land, it felt like my big back yard." As a carpenter, Allen could easily assess an item's value based on the prices he'd seen in hardware stores, then decide what was worth keeping or tossing out. The Hemloft was slowly coming together, but Allen's Craiglist habit was spiraling out of control. got to the point where Allen could




hardly fit into his apartment, let alone his bed. His girlfriend Heidi, who'd been helping Allen build the loft,But his landlord, a former carpenter himself, was beginning to catch on and Allen didn't like it. "What's going on in here?" the landlord asked one night, surveying the wooden slats and glass strewn about. Allen came clean and confessed he was building a secret cabin that might also be illegal. "That's it?" the older man replied. "You need a place to store Allen felt a wave of relief when the landlord revealed he'd had the same "itch" years ago. "He actually helped a lot with storage, which was a lifesaver. knew where I was coming from." The obsession and work on Hemloft were nearing an end by July 2010. However, Allen was bent on owning the floor he'd seen By posing as another caller ("I said I was Rudy"), Allen arranged to pick it up in two hour-long trips back and forth from "I finally got there and the owner was like, 'Take this now

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