1 year ago14 points(+0/-0/+14Score on mirror)3 children
When we bought this old farm the window was just boarded up. Finally got around to fixing it.
I felled the tree. I milled the oak on my band saw. And finally I cut, planed and stained the wood into a window. It's just plexiglass. No double pane or anything fancy. It's an old root cellar/smoke house. Not part of our house.
It's easy to sit here just looking at a picture and start to immediately pull things apart.
I'm glad you added your context. Through processing raw materials, refining and putting it to use: for all that it is, for what it's doing, and for your efforts, I'll give you absolute credit and kudos.
1 year ago5 points(+0/-0/+5Score on mirror)1 child
The good thing about DIY renovations is that lessons will be learned when anything goes wrong.
Alternatively, in my experience, you could hire a tradesman - 95% of them will charge you a premium and then cut every corner to maximize their profit while minimizing their time and effort, leading to the job needing to be redone within a few years. That tradesman knows it's not worth your time or money to risk taking them to court or they will have bankrupted their business to flee all responsibility.
TL;DR: Providing you allow time to research a first-time project properly (and providing it doesn't involve electricity), you're almost always far better off in every way to DIY.
The wires actually go up the vinyl siding a ways before it enters the 2nd floor of this root cellar. Either way, that stuff predates me. Have not gotten around to replacing it yet...
“Your universe has no meaning to them. They will not try to understand. They will be tired, they will be cold, they will make a fire with your beautiful oak door..."
I felled the tree. I milled the oak on my band saw. And finally I cut, planed and stained the wood into a window. It's just plexiglass. No double pane or anything fancy. It's an old root cellar/smoke house. Not part of our house.
I'm glad you added your context. Through processing raw materials, refining and putting it to use: for all that it is, for what it's doing, and for your efforts, I'll give you absolute credit and kudos.
Good job.