Sorry Smacky no pictures of Mrs Seater today.
Instead I have a few pics of the project I have been working on for the past few weekends. Since we only have a carport for now, I needed a place for the table saw, power miter saw, drills, tool boxes, mower, blower, weed whacker, extension cords, power washer, chain saw, etc, etc, etc. So time to put some of those things to work and build a shed. Mrs Seater wanted it to match the house so I had to spend a good deal of time finding the siding that matched our house. That done the work could begin.
Shed is 4 feet by 8 feet at the base. Dug footers and poured concrete into them. Then set those pre fab concrete joist holders in the hole and locked them down with more concrete. One footer at each corner and two more on both the front and back. Then laid 2x6 joists. One piece of 3/4 inch OSB and one 3/4 inch sheet of plywood finished the base.
Footing and first layer of OSB.
Then it was framing time. Used 2x4s for the walls and screwed everything together. Overkill for sure but I want the shed to be here for awhile. Made 4 panels on the driveway one each for the front (including door space), back and sides. Then used notched 2x6's for the roof rafters.
If you look closely you will notice the door opening is not exactly centered. That is so it will be easier to get the lawn mower in and out without having to fold the handle.
Then it was on to the roof and siding. The siding came in 16 foot sections which made it very easy to prep. The wife got involved and painted the siding (prior to hanging) while I finished the roof. Since the outside dimensions were 4 feet by 8 feet, I could cut the siding in half to cover the front and back sections and make three cuts for the side pieces. The doors are a 2x4 frame with an additional cross brace going parallel to the ground half way up the door. They are then covered with a 1/2 inch finish grade plywood.
Smacky, notice the trash bag along the fence for keeping a clean job site. The scrap pieces in front of the doors were to help hold the door while I attached the hinges.
I wanted the doors to be both heavy and to fit tightly to keep the water and leaves out. One the inside part of the doors I am going to hang shovels, rakes, etc. But by making them sit close together when closed, there would be an issue when trying to open them due to the 2x4 construction. So I tapered the back end of each inside 2x4 so they would close easily. Not that this picture allows you to see that.
Next the wife painted a few 1x4s that became the decorative trim around the doors. Couple quick cuts and some liquid nails and a few regular finish nails and we had this.
Now I am working on the corner trim pieces. Same 1x4 lumber painted to match the siding and it makes the corners look much better than just the open ends of the siding. I am also painting the roof trim to match the door trim.
Tomorrow I will add the soffit covers that were painted today, trim the shingles to a consistent overhang over the drip edge, add door hardware and finish the touch up painting. The the interior work begins with a few cabinets, peg boards, shelves, etc.