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Everything posted by Ferdinand
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If I really wanted to do it I would glue down something mildly insulating, which could be an offcut of insulation, or for something more durable perhaps plasitc fasciaboards which come in 5m lengths at about £12-15 a pop. If you are doing work you could use offcuts of windowboards or even spares, which - if you don't have any - someone on here will have.
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Temporary clear polyethene windows, what grade/thickness?
Ferdinand replied to epsilonGreedy's topic in Windows & Glazing
There 4m x 25m rolls of Visqueen on Ebay for under £30, which may be suitable. That is where I have had this from in the past. Ferdinand -
@canalsiderenovation do you actually mean "handleless" as in no handle, or "handless" as in nudge it with your knee? Not sure if it makes a difference. (Then you added an extra s to give "handlesss" and I started thinking of Gollum .) 1 - I think if you paint as a separate process *anywhere* can mix it now. Years ago (2012) the local Johnstone's trade paint centre mixed me a paint on the spot from a Farrow and Ball colour ("panel white") just by phoning up HQ and asking for the spec. 2 - I think you could avoid fingerprints by choice of material and perhaps colour (dark colour?) or by fitting a fingerplate of some sort (which might wreck the streamlined look, unless you went for eg glass fingerplates), otherwise it will just be a small extra cleaning job once a month or so. The wrong material (door or fingerplate) could cause problems; I'm sure I remember a few whinges over small boys' fingerprints on the stainless steel finish on De Loreans. Ferdinand
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Hi, I'm a novice and restoring an old church
Ferdinand replied to NotJustin's topic in Introduce Yourself
You must be the chap who’s first jump was off the top board... Welcome. Is it listed in some form? It looks weathered, but restoring render should be easier than restoring all the stonework to be pristine. -
Disabled Access - Steps down/ramps
Ferdinand replied to iSelfBuild's topic in New House & Self Build Design
Is it better to make it level, but with a gap (150-200mm?) between the fascia and the deck, and a little bridge at the door threshold? That would require a lip to the decking, but would prevent any need to bugger about with ramps between guests etc. Will your staff - whoever they are - be able to move a ramp that size? -
Normal reasons for round-the-edges would be as Plan B if you can’t do underfloor, or Plan Supplementary If the amount you can fit is limited. It also depends on what is under the floor. F
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This has always been my bag for big ivy. Seems to work. As a pragmatic answer, perhaps do the section cut now, and revisit later in your build and decide whether you actually need to do the ladder-gymnastics then. For ladders, I have a Wickes 3 section "professional" one, which was made by one of the branded companies. I think it does more than yours, but still goes in a small hatchback by about an inch. F
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Accessible Ablutions 4 - Finished Photos
Ferdinand commented on Ferdinand's blog entry in God is in the Details
Thanks. it is surprising what fits, and the benefits you can get. Intensive use of space is something that self-builders can miss too easily. There is a discipline of being generous where it is needed, and not elsewhere. that *should* be one of the benefits of using an architect if you do.- 4 comments
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- bathroom refurbishment
- bathroom two
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If you dont’t have anything In it to antagonise neighbours eg overlooking you may well get away with it. They do not want you suddenly being able to stand on your decking and looking into their garden casually. F
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Sketch design for comments/feedback please
Ferdinand replied to Omnibuswoman's topic in New House & Self Build Design
Just brief comments. 1 - There will need to be some detail reworked I think. One might be if you have to have wallspace at the bottom of the stairs to allow for a stairlift .. though you may not need that if you have a bedroom downstairs. 2 - You might want to reconsider your relationship of master bed to window to view to door into the dressing room. Personally I would want a window opposite the bed and the door not down one side of it. 3 - Think about your baths and showers. If mum is downstairs she will want a shower not a bath. My house had this shower room up bathroom down and it is not logical that you should have to climb stairs to get to the accessible one. 4 - If you are being efficient that downstairs shower room might fit under the stairs, depending what you want and hw you arrange it, with maybe a small loss of just from a bedroom. Have a look at my accessible shower room thread here. The space is under the stairs and roughly a 1.2m space at the side. A series of pieces. it may work depending, but you will get an extra room or to make one of them much larger. The detail will need to be right, as will the upstairs layout. 5 - I am not convinced that the kitchen-sitting room is generous enough. I think you would get major perceived and actual benefit from a terrace over the porch with an awning over it, and a pair of patio doors in the middle of that wall for access. I might even go for a portico up there. F -
kill grass and weeds permanently
Ferdinand replied to deuce22's topic in Landscaping, Decking & Patios
With glyphosate.This is my ivy after a fortnight post-spray. The method was trim in March, wait for regrowth and spray after 6-8 weeks. -
I'd say that will be a helluva problem. Personally: don't without a test. I would spray the first coats then roller, unless you are in boy with toy mode. Read the megathread though. The paints I have sprayed OK: Leyland Trade, Armstead (sp?), Valspar. Who's the ugly chap in the photo?
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This is the current lot of micro crops being grown. About 10 of them. Mizuma. Watercress. Spicy leaves. Chives. Coriander. Mixed Rocket. 2 x parsley. 2 x lettuce (Little Gem and Lamb's Lettuce). The photo is after about 5-6 days. Apart from the middle top which is an old one on its 4th harvest. One problem with this setup is slightly uneven lift, so I am turning the big trays every day. People still seem to be a gun trouble getting compost .. gave a bag to my cleaner who started again today. The gym coach's GF, who is fully sheltered, has had a 25% portion of nearly all my packets of seeds to get her going with some indoor gardening and some stuff for outdoors too, which is gratifying. 14 types of seeds supplied in one of those fortnight pillboxes, with an admonition driven in with a cluebat to be very careful about tipping it upside down ‘cos the doors are cr*p and will all open together of their own accord.
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What kind of board should I use?
Ferdinand replied to pronane's topic in Bathrooms, Ensuites & Wetrooms
TBH I think performance needs a huge priority over cost in this case. Unless it is absolutely horribly horribly expensive. It needs to be right. Saving £100 or £200 on boarding is likely to be a false economy unless you know the product is as good. -
What kind of board should I use?
Ferdinand replied to pronane's topic in Bathrooms, Ensuites & Wetrooms
Welcome. Many of us here have used a product called Multipanel rather than tiles for the shower, or for the whole bathroom. It is one of these 'bathroom panel' products with a marine ply core. Personally I would use it again, having done several bathrooms with it. It is very water resistant, and lasts a long time still looking mint. You also need to pay very careful attention to your ventilation. For thinking about general questions, I did a very detailed set of articles about bathrooms I had redone at home last year. These were tiles because they were not total guttings. It is flagged accessible but contains a lot of thinking. https://forum.buildhub.org.uk/blogs/entry/622-adapting-a-house-for-people-who-are-frail-elderly-or-disabled/ -
Your own personal Walkie-Talkie tower. Can you fry eggs on your Jag, then?
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Artificial Grass price info and keeping it beautiful
Ferdinand replied to Adam2's topic in Landscaping, Decking & Patios
We used to have a peacock. We lived in the old manor house, and someone turned up with one and said "we found this in our back garden - is it yours?". Dad (fool) said "yes" and spent the next years bringing it back when it kept flying away. -
I think it was @Thorfun who was looking for this, which came with my hedge cutter. You will need to click through.
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Best way to use wall panels in a shower cubicle?
Ferdinand replied to Robert Clark's topic in Wall Tiles & Tiling
You run a bead of high quality silicone in the several mm vertical gap you have left below the panels. Whether you fill it to the point where the silicone is proud and profile it using one of those oojie-boojie silicone profiling tools is I think up to you. I would. F -
Best way to use wall panels in a shower cubicle?
Ferdinand replied to Robert Clark's topic in Wall Tiles & Tiling
Good guidance above. -
New Member - Embarking on Self Build in Bristol
Ferdinand replied to AjitSingh213's topic in Introduce Yourself
Welcome. -
Shropshire have an online "working" copy, which seems to be very up to date - Feb this year. https://www.shropshire.gov.uk/outdoor-partnerships/countryside-access-and-public-rights-of-way/the-definitive-map/ It says Public Rights of Way, so it should cover roads. There's even a phone number.
