Hi Dan, the inside cladding looks really good, its not the usual cladding everyone gets, You Dan and Mrs Wheeler Should be Proud with every Design and Creation You have put into Building this House from the ground up.
I realise you could trim the boards with a number of different tools but that multitool saw really does the job on the 'Insiding'. Really like it when you managed to bring the board edge (pattern) around onto the next sheet, that really makes the corner pop...
What I like about how your doing is different from anybody else and it looks like a log cabin is awesome. we got a bun over here and the walls on outside looks like that overlapping I truly love the concept and the looks.
My brother in law and me did that on his house except we mitered the corner so that there was no end grain showing. It was a tedious process but worth the effort.
That's an interesting way to do those outside (inside) corners. I thought I hated it at first, but it really grew on me and now I like it a lot! Looks cool, Dan!
Dan, so good to see yet another video from you, with how your and sheryl's home is coming along. I Love what your doing with the outdoor indoor siding on the walls, with the live edge. Love the look, reminds of of calm waves..and naturally we have to have Pat's " Good"!🙂.
Looks great. I wouldn't have guessed how easy that was vs the outcome. Not having to be level as you go and finish cutting with that tool, even I could do that 😂 Cheers to the reverse chicken wrangling
Dan, great to see you working back on your house. Makes a change to be working with wood again? Maybe the problem solving with the metal at Andrew's is affecting the way you work the wood a little? I really like the way you did those walls, unique to you. Yes, you could have done it differently, but your house your rules? I kinda imagine there may be problems with splitting further along as the wood dries out, but it should all hold, and I guess an extra screw will sort anything out? My uncle's Victorian house in Wales is wood (Pitch Pine, I think) throughout, and it still smells great over 150 years(+/-) later. Are you going to be treating the wood, you probably said a while ago and I forget?