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August 7th, 2006

15_the_circle: (rerefenestrated cottage)
Monday, August 7th, 2006 08:12 pm

picking up where things left off last September, the deshinglement of the S wall is now underway in preparation for its reversion to period material and finish. 

here's how it looked this evening.  though most of the shingles were backed with plywood, some sections retained the original random width rough cut tongue and groove siding.. 

(click through this thumbnail for higher resolution image)




s wall layers
wall layers
(L to R: new, plywood, plywood, old, plywood, shingles)

if you click on through to the full sized image you will see nails.  lots and lots of nails. 

15_the_circle: (rerefenestrated cottage)
Monday, August 7th, 2006 08:32 pm

yesterday afternoon while up on the porch roof to take a closer look at the new old windows it occurred to me to investigate the dormer roofs.  the known period photos of the place tend to come at intervals of 20+ years, so the sequencing of some of the changes the cottage has been through hasn't been completely obvious.  it did, however, seem that the dormers were added around the time the shingles were, probably when the old old upper front window was replaced with the old new one (which has itself just been replaced with the new old one). 

what I haven't known is when the dates of these window changes fall with respect to roof changes.  for a while I have known that there's a tin roof dating back to somewhere after c. 1905 and before, say, the mid 1920s, up there under a couple of layers of asphalt shingles, but I was under the impression that the dormers had postdated it. 

having taken a closer look, I now know: they don't. 
here's the roof of the N side front dormer, with shingle layers pulled back to reveal the material and pattern of underlying tin:

(click through these thumbnails for higher resolution images)




dormer tin roof
dormer roof tin

what a shame it is that the underlying tin has been perforated with so many shingle nail holes.  I'm estimating it at a few gazillion. 

so when the time comes to deal with the cottage roof I hope to able to revert to tin or a suitable substitute.  one other cottage on the Circle has its original tin roof, which I have long admired coveted ...

tin roof - 1 the Circle
tin roof - 1 the Circle

... seen in this December 2005 image in which the lightest dusting of snow brings out texture and pattern. 

the trick will be to eke some more time out of the current roof, which has attained if not exceeded its service life, and to still be able to afford the work when the E end subtraction and subsequent rebuilding get done.  I'm figuring that's probably a couple of years out.