Re: Michigan WFO
Mike, It is looking great..
Peter
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Re: Michigan WFO
Spent a little time this weekend putting up some stone veneer. It is not as fast as I thought it would be (nothing ever is). Fortunately, my wife seemed to enjoy trying to arrange the stone like big puzzle pieces. It was fun working with someone else. She said she helping "just to get that thing done with", but I think she sort of enjoyed it!
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Re: Michigan WFO
Wow,
I didn't notice that you used hardie lap siding for the eave. That was what I ended up using on my eaves for my shed. I did use it, but I absolutely hate working with that cement board. There's got to be a better way.
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Re: Michigan WFO
I don't know Mike - I would have made the eaves about a 1/2 inch longer
It's looking great!
Les...
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Re: Michigan WFO
Seems to work, Daren. It was available at Home Depot. They come in different widths, but HD only carried one size. Of course it was too wide, and I needed to cut it. It is harder than the cement board, but still scores and snaps. Just takes longer. It came pre-primed. The website states it can easily be painted, just not stained. It's very durable.
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Re: Michigan WFO
Looks great, Mike. I'm very glad you posted about the lap siding, because I had no idea what I would use for my soffits, but now I know!
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Re: Michigan WFO
One day you will dream,
In a driving rainshower,
Of a deeper eave.
A little haiku I wrote.
Just having a little fun. It looks good.
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Re: Michigan WFO
I also finished putting up all of the cement board. I sealed it up.
For the soffits, I used a James Hardie product for lap siding. It is very hard, paintable, and should last a long time. I was worried about using stained wood in MI. I didn't want something that I would need to re-stain every couple years.
HardiePlank Lap Siding
There you go, Dino. I think that makes us even again!!
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Re: Michigan WFO
I packed the inside with loose vermiculite. I found a pretty good price for ~ $10 for 3cu ft bags. Good thing, too. I really should have walled off corners and dead ends better. That monster ate up a LOT of vermiculite.
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Re: Michigan WFO
I decided to cut back my eaves a few inches. I like the balance of the shorter eaves better. If you prefer the old way, don't tell me. It's too late to go back!!Chances are, the only one that notices a difference is me.
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Re: Michigan WFO
Still thinking about what to do with my eaves. . .
In the meantime, I picked up some stone. The flats had to be ordered, but the corners were in stock.
This is "Mill Creek Country Squire" natural thin veneer stone from Buechel Stone. Just applied with Type S mortar. I like the stone. It really has a lot of variability as far as thickness and dimension. This will hide goofs better. It looks pretty rustic as a complete wall. I started with the back side, to get the hang of it.2 Photos
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Re: Michigan WFO
That's one "dog-house" I'd live in! You could put a crescent moon design over the opening for an "out-house" look as an option.
But seriously Mike, that example pic you posted of the copper flashing against the stone is really appealing. But the slate roof will prevent any "dog-house" look IMO. I can see though how attractive it might be to skip the front fascia board and the wood finish under the eaves in the front and back (& the painting or sealing of it) but at the expense of extra work removing your edges roof rafters. I am going to use some fine quality 1x4 or 6's and stain it to go under my eaves.
I guess I agree with everything Lars just said about the overall "look".
Especially if your material colors don't have a big contrast, it would look even less "dog-housey". (ie: a dark roof over very light upper oven over a dark base and completely different color counter etc... will make the eaves stand out more). Then again: you would assume I've got the "interior design gene" but it by-passed me all together for some reason. Maybe next life....
Good luck whatever you decide, Dino
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Re: Michigan WFO
Mike,
I would NOT do that. (Cut the soffit)
That eave will be fine looking. You need to just look at pictures of stone houses.
You need a facia ( which could be treated wood, cedar, or painted wood of some sort) and a copper flashing can mostly cover that up. Fill the soffit with that cement board you are using and either paint or lay a coat of mortar over it ( like stucco)
The board on the fascia will give it a nice looking edge. The copper right up against stone in your photo is fine for that building, but not necessarily the best for yours.
Don't backtrack. It's good. Just keep going.
I KNOW what you mean about fascia, soffit, you would think it would be SO easy, yet it can be difficult. Especially that transition between the soffit and your stone veneer!
L.
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Re: Michigan WFO
Originally posted by Lars View PostMike,
the question mark I still have is, what will you do under the soffit?
I'm not sure what to do with the soffit. That's why I'm considering cutting back the overhangs, essentially eliminating the soffit (like the photo a few posts above).
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Re: Michigan WFO
Mike,
If you use slate roof, copper flashing, the question mark I still have is, what will you do under the soffit? You could use the same cement board under there. Believe it or not, that top edge can be sort of tricky when mortaring in your stone.
And given the above... it will NOT look like a dog house..( not too many stone dog houses around with copper flashing and slate roof--except maybe at the white house!)
Lars.
ps. The storage arch... how ever you treat it, should really change the overall appearance, still.
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