Framing Floors, Walls, and Ceilings (For Pros By Pros)





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by: Editors of Fine Homebuilding

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Book Description -- For the DIY-er who wants to build a new home from scratch, add on an addition, or tackle a major renovation, the mix of articles featured in this guide shows how to do it right the first time - from trueing up a mudsill and cutting multiple parts all at once (a tremendous timesaver) to selecting headers, erecting trusses, and completing cathedral and coffered ceilings. Each project is accompanied by step-by-step instructions and extensive color photos and illustrations.

Framing Floors, Walls, and Ceilings
Fine Homebuilding magazine
Learn the trade secrets used by pros to get first rate framing results
New homes, additions and major remodeling require solid professional framing. This selection of articles from Fine Homebuilding magazine explains the tools, techniques, code requirements, and trade secrets expert builders need and use to frame floors, walls and ceilings-efficiently and the right way. Achieve top-notch results without inspection hold-ups or client call-backs. From truing up a mudsill and cutting multiple parts in a single pass of the saw (a tremendous time-saver) to selecting headers, erecting trusses, and completing cathedral and coffered ceilings, Framing Floors, Walls, and Ceilings delivers the best field-tested information in the business.

Written by the pros who actually do the work, these articles will help you to:
. Square and level mudsills
. Create simple jigs for faster framing
. Build coffered ceilings
. Lay out for perfect walls
. Straighten framed walls
. Plumb, align, and brace framed walls
. Frame simple curves
. Plan and frame cathedral ceilings

Framing Floors, Walls, and Ceilings

Fine Homebuilding magazine

Learn the trade secrets used by pros to get first rate framing results
Introduction

PART 1: attics
Airtight Attic Access
Disappearing Attic Stairways
Fixing a Cold, Drafty House
Bed Alcove
A Fresh Look for an Attic Bath
Adding On, but Staying Small
Jewelbox Bathroom
Adding a Second Story

PART 2: Dormers
A Gable-Dormer Retrofit
Framing an Elegant Dormer
Keeping a Dormer Addition Clean and Dry
Framing a Dramatic Dormer

PART 3: Skylights
Dramatic Skylight
Skylight Kitchen
Shedding Light on Skylights
Framing for Skylights

Credits

Index

Reviews:

Framing Floors, Walls, and Ceilings

Fine Homebuilding magazine

Learn the trade secrets used by pros to get first rate framing results

I recently helped a friend remodel the bathroom in his 150-year old house. The room had been gutted, and the exposed framing was a graphic reminder that we really don't build houses like we used to. The exterior wall was framed with timbers bigger than my leg, and the wall separating the bath from the bedroom was framed with 8-in. wide chestnut planks on occasional centers. These 1-in. thick studs had many edges and were turned flat to provide a broad nailing base for the accordion lath that held the plaster. It was beautiful, at least to a couple of old carpenters, and we wondered for a moment how we might leave it all exposed.

The transition from building with planks and timbers to the way we build houses today started 200 years ago with the invention of a nail-making machine, but didn't really get going until the widespread mechanization of sawmills over the next few decades. At that point, you had studs and nails, which are what we still use today. But the methods and materials have evolved continuously over the years. Balloon framing, where the studs ran uninterrupted from foundation to roof, gave way to the platform framing we use today. Studs got smaller. Plywood replaced board sheathing. Nail guns overtook hammers. And so on.

Efforts to make better use of our dwindling forests, to build houses faster and to make them safer in the wake of hurricanes, earthquakes and fires have all led to changes in the way we stitch our homes together. If you're building today, whether it's a new house or a partition wall your basement, you need to keep up with new materials and changing codes. The articles in this book will help you do that (among other things). Collected from past issues of Fine Homebuilding magazine, these articles were written by experienced builders. If they worked beside you on a job site, or lived next door, you'd ask their advice about the header over your new picture window. But good builders aren't that easy to find, which is why we got these folks to write down what they've learned.
-Kevin Ireton, editor
Fine Homebuilding

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