4292. alistairconnor - 7/22/2008 10:38:32 AM Actually the asymmetrical shape plays tricks with perspective. The table looks like it's sloping to the right. I like it. 4293. arkymalarky - 7/22/2008 4:07:46 PM Yeah, it creates a lot of visual interest. WHen it's stained it will be even more so. I like the base, too. 4294. iiibbb - 7/23/2008 2:25:26 AM This is looking straight down. Hopefully you can see how it doesn't matter how you orient it within an L-shaped sofa (i.e. the sofa will be along the left and bottom of the picture).
None of the radii are the same.
4295. iiibbb - 7/23/2008 3:34:23 AM The secret to making something like this is clamps (lots) and jigs.
4296. TheWizardOfWhimsy - 7/24/2008 5:25:22 AM For cat lovers . . .
4297. TheWizardOfWhimsy - 7/24/2008 10:58:09 PM Giggles galore!
4298. thoughtful - 7/25/2008 1:10:26 PM Time for a house update.
Finally got past the issue with the full insulated basement floor.
and they laid the rebar on top
Don't ask me what's going on with shutterfly and image size!
4299. thoughtful - 7/25/2008 1:13:16 PM Then concrete goes on top in a big pour.
Need lots of bodies to accomplish this...they all appreciated the cold 6-pack I brought! 4300. thoughtful - 7/25/2008 1:14:46 PM Last poured was the lower garage/workshop area so it had the proper slopes in case of spills.
4301. thoughtful - 7/25/2008 1:16:06 PM Then, not to sound like an x-rated film, but we got WOOD!
4302. thoughtful - 7/25/2008 1:16:56 PM Lots of wood!
4303. thoughtful - 7/25/2008 1:46:52 PM This is from the road looking at the front of the house.
The garage on the far left is unframed. The big window is in hubby's study...the stairs are where the front porch will be. The next window is the library and the far window is a bedroom. 4304. thoughtful - 7/25/2008 1:50:35 PM This is the west side of the house on the barn side.
On the lower level, the large opening is for the jeep garage and work shop...the window is in my craft room. Upstairs are bed and bath windows. 4305. thoughtful - 7/25/2008 1:54:09 PM From the back side, the full two stories are revealed.
Going across the upper floor is bedroom, dining room, kitchen, breakfast nook and family room. Deck will be off to the right behind the garage....where that concrete wall is.
Lower level is craft room, sliders to the exercise room (outside will be a patio) then guest room. Outside on the right under the deck will be the outdoor shower. YUM! 4306. wonkers2 - 7/25/2008 2:02:42 PM Looks like a wonderful house on a beautiful site! 4307. thoughtful - 7/25/2008 2:37:42 PM Thanks wonks.
I get so excited about this. It's amazing to have walked through the house so often in my head and now start to see it in reality. Everyone kept insisting that as the framing goes up and i see the actual rooms I'm going to be changing my mind and wanting to move things around, but so far it's been exactly what i expected. No changes needed.
Now we have to buckle down to go through all the rooms again to get a handle on the electrical and plumbing details. Lighting is especially critical to making rooms look right.
Any of you who are fans of Divine Design with Candice Olson...she redid a room in a basement that was only 12x14 and yet I counted 21 light fixtures in total! No wonder her rooms just sparkle!
4308. arkymalarky - 7/25/2008 5:35:49 PM WOW!
When you know what you want and you've spent a lot of time planning it, walking through the frameup just reinforces it. To me, that's the most exciting stage of building a house.
Lighting and plumbing are so crucial. And H/AC vents, too. Our electrician is a good friend, and he walked us through every ceiling fan and every switch and light placement, how to divide up breakers, every detail. There are a few things I would change, but they are my fault, because he made the alternatives clear. Nothing that wouldn't be easily changeable, however.
Our H/AC guy asked if we wanted a vent in our closet. It would never have occurred to me, and I didn't, but I could see why he asked. Our carpenters did our plumbing. The best construction workers, beginning with the architect who draws up the plans plans, are those who bring up options you might not have thought of and then defer to what you want unless there's a real structural or functional problem with it.
I didn't want a garage. I told the carpenters to slap me something off the side of the house to park the cars under. They talked to Bob and then they all convinced me that the money a full two-car garage would cost would be well worth it in a lot of ways a carport wouldn't. If they hadn't broached the subject and had kept their opinions to themselves I'd have been disappointed in the result. A friend of ours suggested we add a foot to the planned width of the wraparound porch. That made a huge difference, and it never would have occurred to me to adjust the plans to widen the porch. Our porch isn't a show porch. We use it all the time. We'd feel cramped if we hadn't widened it. 4309. thoughtful - 7/26/2008 2:13:25 PM Absolutely! That's why I always encourage as many people and as many eyes on the project as possible. You never know what idea someone might suggest that will make a huge impact on how the house works. I do find the whole process to be most exciting. 4310. thoughtful - 7/26/2008 2:15:27 PM Of course, here in new england, a garage is a necessity and an attached garage totally desirable. Tho I'm amazed at my neighbors many of whom have their garages so packed with stuff that the cars are outside all the time anyway. 4311. wonkers2 - 7/26/2008 2:16:17 PM Garages aren't needed for cars, as Frank Lloyd pointed out years ago, but they do come in handy for storing lawn mowers, yard tools, etc.
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