Jesse, I decided to build my own shed after reviewing available purchase options. Because of the unique size, 16 by 3, building was the only option. After watching your series, I felt confident enough to handle the project on my own. Very Helpful and THANK YOU. I will send photos when complete. I may be watching a couple segments again.
You're adorable! Thank you for this series! I've completed 2 different projects as an absolute beginner! I bought my own supplies and a majority of my power tools. I'm not sure how to send pics but I'm pretty darn proud of how they turned out. So, now, I need a place to put all my woodworking goodies. So, in 2 years I'll have saved enough money to build this. (That's the typical waiting time for poor people. No joke.) 🤦♀️ Just say a prayer that I dont have a heat stroke - I live on the Alabama/Florida line. Talk about humid.
Aww thanks. You're very welcome, I'm glad your learning and doing! You can email them too me, channel name at gmail.com (can't put links here) or it's on my about page, I'd love to see them. Hey I get it, trust me, I'm not swimming in cash either, but at least you're working towards something! I'll pray for no heat stroke, you pray I don't freeze to death as I'm in central Canada lol Take care
Looks like I found my spring project for storage of my tractor. I live in New England so I get about not digging down to hell for the foundation. I’m going to use paver blocks for base. Excellent video.
I really like the way you did your walls I was going to say that's one of the best videos that I've seen but I'd be wrong that is the best detailed video that I've seen okay videos awesome job dude appreciate you sharing
I just finished building this shed. The only difference is I built mine 8 x 12, used 2 x 6 floor joist, and used pre primed wood siding. Cost around $1500. Thanks for your videos. This was the most simple, basic design out there.
I just finished a 6x12 using your videos. I’d be happy to share pics. Thanks for posting the videos. I was going to do the 8x10, but the yard I put it in was for a duplex and it would have been too wide. 6x12 worked perfectly.
That's awesome! I'm pumped you made it and glad I could help! Sometimes modifications are necessary, but it's easy to mod. Yeah I'd love to see it, email me some pics
@@JessedoesDIYhow do we email pics please? I'm in the process of making my own woodworking shop and storage...plus a small porch. I've been mostly getting supplies for free from marketplace pick ups...definitely diy amateur but thanks to people like you...I'm a student of RUclips university...lol...thanks for the lessons
My email address is in the description and my about section! Sounds like you've got a bunch of work to do, I'm right there with ya. I'm in the process of buying a fixer upper house. I'm glad I can help you with whatever I can. Good luck on all your projects
@@JessedoesDIY it's been frustrating so far due to financial and physical restrictions...but last night...I could have beaten my hubby...besides "mansplaining" (thanks for not being condescending)...I spent ages making sure the deck frame was perfectly square and true to ensure I have a level base using made for it braces...he "doesn't believe " in brackets...undid mine and then couldn't understand why I was upset! Almost had to ask how to bury a body under the cement slab...he's lucky I love him.
Yeah I get it, trust me. If you watch enough of my vids you'll see me wearing braces for almost every joint I have at one time or another, many issues. I'm also a really small channel so trying to afford these bigger projects to make great content gets expensive. Haha well whether he believes in brackets or not, they do have a purpose that a simple screw or nail can't do, that's why they exist in all different forms. I hope the rest goes smoother for you
I built this shed last fall. Same colors as yours. My wife painted a;; the trim before hand and I painted all the walls. I used 5/4 deck boards for my fascia. Also, I built mine 8'X12'. I followed all your dimensions for the height of the walls. It turned out pretty nice. I have gotten lots of compliments. Thanks for posting this build. JT
No problem, glad you liked them. It may be depending on what you're going to store in it but it is very easy to cut it out of the soffit and add a vent front and rear
For sure you can. I actually just finished another shed series using that smart siding, if you want to see it, and I made a different floor. But yes the rock is just 3/4"-1" rock base. You may also find 'pack' or 'base' depending on where you live that work well too.
Thank you so much for the informative information on how to build a shed from start to finish. Those are awesome videos. I am thinking about just buying a steel shed. However, I need to build the floor. I like the way you built the floor and I know I can do that. I am just not sure how I am going to attach the steel shed to the floor unless I buy the additional floor kit. What is your suggestion?
No problem, I'm glad you got something from it. I'm not sure what the bottom of the steel shed looks like but if it has a lower plate like a normal wall I'd just predrilled a small hole through the bottom and use some 1/4" lag bolts with a washer down into the floor. Couple inches long will be plenty
I want to build three sheds as I get the money and then connect them together. One a bedroom, one a kitchen and one a living room. How do I connect them side by side with just a doorway in between or maybe even the whole wall gone in-between the connection?
Great video series. I am planning to build a shed using your similar concept with floating floor using 4x4 posts(or 6x6?) and slanted roof. Considering 12x16.... any draw backs or concerns with your concept with larger size shed?
Thanks. If I went that big I'd up the roof rafters up to 2x6, and the floor would be minimum 2x6, depending on what you're storing in it maybe even 2x8. Or you could run 2x6 with 6x6 under it. It depends on how heavy of things you put in it and your type of soil. Obviously you still want it sitting on a rock base, but you may want more strength from heavy items, or more resistance to being pushed into the ground, or both. Hard to say
Thanks. Yeah it's shingled but in the individual videos where I did the roof I said that there was a blizzard bearing down on my and I had to hustle. So while I was building things my dad was putting the shingles on. I figured there are plenty of videos on how to shingle or you could do steel or whatever and I figured that the structure was more important to film
Thanks, glad you liked it! Sorry, the materials list was giving me grief trying to share it, some people said it worked, for others it didn't so I removed it. But I have plans up now anyways if you want with a materials list.
Thanks. It's close to the same amount, but this is a much stronger shed with more headroom than most of the plastic ones I've seen here. Plus you can hang nearly enything off a wall by just slamming a hook or a screw into a stud.
Not at all. As I said at the start it's all built on a bed of rock, not gravel because it holds moisture, rock allows for drainage. This way any water just seeps into the ground and the skids stay dry. The rock also makes them much less likely to push into the ground over time. And finally it's pressure treated wood so it's rated for 20-25 years of direct to ground contact
Thanks, appreciate it! Glad I could help. I never had time to show the actual roofing process, like I said in the video, I was rushing to beat a blizzard that was coming in and the roof wasn't filmed, it was being done while I was still building and finishing the door and trim. But a basic shingle or asphalt paper roof would work
Nice video. Looking to build one shed identical to yours. About the roof shingles, how did you cap them at the top, for the water not to sip in? Thank you.
Hello Jesse, Really great detailed tutorial for building a DIY shed. I have two questions for you. 1. The plan you put up on the link could it be used for 10'x10' shed instead for 8x10? I am planning to build a 10'x10' shed with the same height. 2. Can I build the shed on the Paver Stone? I have got the a base made out of Paver interlocking Stone which is 12'x12'. Do I need dig a hole in the paver & anchor the shed or Could I used 4x4 pressure treated as a base under the Shed floor just like you did. I am located in Toronto, Canada. just to consider the extreme weather here. Your advise will be greatly appreciated. Let me know please.
Question from novice, not judgement at all, just curious, because I have to build a shed: Treated ground contact wood is okay to touch the ground for the base? The name's a no brainer I know but been told "wood always rots" so is it better to put the 4x4 treated beams on concrete blocks?
No problem. I'd recommend watching the individual videos and updates. I've shown and explained why it's fine many times but you are more than welcome to set it on blocks. This has a crushed natural rock base, not gravel as that has dirt in it. The rock doesn't hold moisture and keeps them dry, I just didn't have to bring in any rock as there was a playset there at one time and the rock just needed to be raked out.
Jesse, is there a way I can build a shed but have all the walls roof and floor be easily removable so I can move it? I'm in a rental home in Arizona and would love to build a shed but also move it away packing each frame on my trailer.
I'd probably build the floor frame asan assembly, and each wall as an assembly. Then just tie it all together from the inside with only a screw or two in each corner, and then some temporary brackets inside to hold it together. Then add the rood rafters in place, but, don't screw them down to the top plates, just use those hurricane ties I showed to fasten it down from the inside, add your rood sheeting and now your roof is a solid structure. Maybe leave the trim off for now, or lightly attach it. Then when you need to disassemble it you just remove the brackets inside and it should pop apart in sections
I spread rocks out first, mine were already there from an old play structure. Don't use gravel because it holds water, a bed of natural rocks about 25mm around gives a dry bed for the 4x4 pressure treated sleeper beams. Because the beams are rated for 25 years direct to ground contact, the rocks will help extend that a little further still. Then the floor is built upon those, which leaves an air gap so it doesn't hold or absorb ground moisture, it will stay completely dry. This floor will last the life of the shed no problem. I was a framer building houses for years and this is the way we built sheds for people because it follows all the normal building practices. I explain it all as I go in the individual videos as well as in the plans. I go over what type, size and length of wood to use, what type and length of screws, the amounts of everything as well as all the measurments if you want
OSB will hold up just fine with a little care. It's already naturally rot resistant, the paint acts as a sealer protecting it further. A new coat of paint every 8-10 years and it will last 35 easy. The ends towards the ground should be fine for a long time because they stay dry being up on the 4×4 beams, no direct ground contact
Hey, OSB is actually slightly weather resistant from the glue inside of it bonding the wood together. Painting it seals it further so the wood is sealed from the weather. You'll just have to make sure to paint it again in like 8 years or so to keep it maintained but it'll last a good 30 years at least. Plus OSB is actually the sheeting material you do for houses or anything
I also live in Canada, hence my channel name. I'm in Saskatchewan specifically where it's brutal. I just used outdoor Premier Infinity from Canadian Tire. It's not so much about what brand, as long as it's outdoor specific paint you'll be good as paint relys on layers for protection. 2 coats upfront when its built, another coat a couple years later if it needs it, then every 5-8 years or as needed. Once it has a good thick coat of paint built up it'll last a long time
The exposed wood is all treated or rot resistant. Treated wood is good for 30 years exposed, and the rot resistant stuff is sealed by paint. As long as you keep up a new coat of paint every 5-8 years or when needed, it'll last a long time
Jesse, I decided to build my own shed after reviewing available purchase options. Because of the unique size, 16 by 3, building was the only option. After watching your series, I felt confident enough to handle the project on my own. Very Helpful and THANK YOU. I will send photos when complete. I may be watching a couple segments again.
That is awesome! Good luck and can't wait to see it.
You're adorable! Thank you for this series! I've completed 2 different projects as an absolute beginner! I bought my own supplies and a majority of my power tools. I'm not sure how to send pics but I'm pretty darn proud of how they turned out. So, now, I need a place to put all my woodworking goodies. So, in 2 years I'll have saved enough money to build this. (That's the typical waiting time for poor people. No joke.) 🤦♀️ Just say a prayer that I dont have a heat stroke - I live on the Alabama/Florida line. Talk about humid.
Aww thanks. You're very welcome, I'm glad your learning and doing! You can email them too me, channel name at gmail.com (can't put links here) or it's on my about page, I'd love to see them. Hey I get it, trust me, I'm not swimming in cash either, but at least you're working towards something! I'll pray for no heat stroke, you pray I don't freeze to death as I'm in central Canada lol Take care
@@JessedoesDIY can't find 🤦♀️I have a channel 😄 T Gleaton16
Enjoyed this whole series Jesse. Learned a lot and really clearly explained and great presentation.
Thanks very much, I'm glad you liked it!
Looks like I found my spring project for storage of my tractor. I live in New England so I get about not digging down to hell for the foundation. I’m going to use paver blocks for base. Excellent video.
Cool, glad I could help! Lol yeah, hell is a long way down. Good luck on yours, let me know how it goes
I really like the way you did your walls I was going to say that's one of the best videos that I've seen but I'd be wrong that is the best detailed video that I've seen okay videos awesome job dude appreciate you sharing
Wow, I really appreciate it! Glad you liked it and that I could help. If you're building one, good luck on yours!
I just finished building this shed. The only difference is I built mine 8 x 12, used 2 x 6 floor joist, and used pre primed wood siding. Cost around $1500. Thanks for your videos. This was the most simple, basic design out there.
That's awesome! I'm glad to hear you made it!
Great video, filming, craftsmanship, detailed and successful. Thank you.
Thanks, appreciate it! Happy to help
I just finished a 6x12 using your videos. I’d be happy to share pics. Thanks for posting the videos. I was going to do the 8x10, but the yard I put it in was for a duplex and it would have been too wide. 6x12 worked perfectly.
That's awesome! I'm pumped you made it and glad I could help! Sometimes modifications are necessary, but it's easy to mod. Yeah I'd love to see it, email me some pics
@@JessedoesDIYhow do we email pics please? I'm in the process of making my own woodworking shop and storage...plus a small porch. I've been mostly getting supplies for free from marketplace pick ups...definitely diy amateur but thanks to people like you...I'm a student of RUclips university...lol...thanks for the lessons
My email address is in the description and my about section! Sounds like you've got a bunch of work to do, I'm right there with ya. I'm in the process of buying a fixer upper house. I'm glad I can help you with whatever I can. Good luck on all your projects
@@JessedoesDIY it's been frustrating so far due to financial and physical restrictions...but last night...I could have beaten my hubby...besides "mansplaining" (thanks for not being condescending)...I spent ages making sure the deck frame was perfectly square and true to ensure I have a level base using made for it braces...he "doesn't believe " in brackets...undid mine and then couldn't understand why I was upset! Almost had to ask how to bury a body under the cement slab...he's lucky I love him.
Yeah I get it, trust me. If you watch enough of my vids you'll see me wearing braces for almost every joint I have at one time or another, many issues. I'm also a really small channel so trying to afford these bigger projects to make great content gets expensive.
Haha well whether he believes in brackets or not, they do have a purpose that a simple screw or nail can't do, that's why they exist in all different forms. I hope the rest goes smoother for you
Great Video, I built a shed in UK w/ your video. Thank you and you need a good job!!!
Thanks, I appreciate it! That's awesome! I'm stoked you gave it a go, I'd love to see it if you'd email pics. Thanks for sharing
I built this shed last fall. Same colors as yours. My wife painted a;; the trim before hand and I painted all the walls. I used 5/4 deck boards for my fascia. Also, I built mine 8'X12'. I followed all your dimensions for the height of the walls. It turned out pretty nice. I have gotten lots of compliments. Thanks for posting this build. JT
That's awesome! Glad to hear it and happy I could help.
Watch over and over.i enjoy your build I'm going to build shed.like your style.enjoybyour video
Have fun!
good job young man!
Thank you!
,so cool ,I all way want to build one for my self.
Thanks. Good luck on yours
Is an excellent job!!
Thanks!
Wow nice work. What was the total cost to build the shed? Thanks in advance.
Thanks. I could build it today for around $1400
Thanks for putting these videos together. Question: is venting needed? Don't think I saw you adding vents.
No problem, glad you liked them. It may be depending on what you're going to store in it but it is very easy to cut it out of the soffit and add a vent front and rear
Great job!
Thanks
Perfection
Thanks!
Can I do the same build but with T 11 siding? Also what rock was used for the base? It’s just considered 3/4” rock base?
For sure you can. I actually just finished another shed series using that smart siding, if you want to see it, and I made a different floor. But yes the rock is just 3/4"-1" rock base. You may also find 'pack' or 'base' depending on where you live that work well too.
Hi thank you for the video I’m building the same as you did I’m watching your video step by step I’ll let you know how it comes out 👍👏
Hey, that's awesome! Good luck on yours, can't wait
I laughed so hard when you cut the osb and it tilted in making you stumble.
I've done it so many times and it never gets old.
Lol yeah, was not thinking there was no floor joist there. Oh well, I'm sure we will both do it again at some point lol thanks for watching!
Thank you so much for the informative information on how to build a shed from start to finish. Those are awesome videos. I am thinking about just buying a steel shed. However, I need to build the floor. I like the way you built the floor and I know I can do that. I am just not sure how I am going to attach the steel shed to the floor unless I buy the additional floor kit. What is your suggestion?
No problem, I'm glad you got something from it. I'm not sure what the bottom of the steel shed looks like but if it has a lower plate like a normal wall I'd just predrilled a small hole through the bottom and use some 1/4" lag bolts with a washer down into the floor. Couple inches long will be plenty
nice and simple shade by using so little tools. i wonder how you finished the roof on the osb.
Thanks, glad you liked it. I shingled it but was unable to film it as I had to rush before a blizzard showed up
I want to build three sheds as I get the money and then connect them together. One a bedroom, one a kitchen and one a living room. How do I connect them side by side with just a doorway in between or maybe even the whole wall gone in-between the connection?
Great video series. I am planning to build a shed using your similar concept with floating floor using 4x4 posts(or 6x6?) and slanted roof. Considering 12x16.... any draw backs or concerns with your concept with larger size shed?
Thanks. If I went that big I'd up the roof rafters up to 2x6, and the floor would be minimum 2x6, depending on what you're storing in it maybe even 2x8. Or you could run 2x6 with 6x6 under it. It depends on how heavy of things you put in it and your type of soil. Obviously you still want it sitting on a rock base, but you may want more strength from heavy items, or more resistance to being pushed into the ground, or both. Hard to say
Nice build. I seem to have missed the part where you tiled the roof, I assume you used roofing tiles and roofing nails, but forgot to video tape it.
Thanks. Yeah it's shingled but in the individual videos where I did the roof I said that there was a blizzard bearing down on my and I had to hustle. So while I was building things my dad was putting the shingles on. I figured there are plenty of videos on how to shingle or you could do steel or whatever and I figured that the structure was more important to film
Hi. Great job! Wonderful and complete. But cant find a materials list...how or where di I find? Thanks.
Thanks, glad you liked it! Sorry, the materials list was giving me grief trying to share it, some people said it worked, for others it didn't so I removed it. But I have plans up now anyways if you want with a materials list.
Great video indeed! Thank you so much for sharing! I wonder if the cost is higher or lower than buying a resin/plastic shed of the same size.
Thanks. It's close to the same amount, but this is a much stronger shed with more headroom than most of the plastic ones I've seen here. Plus you can hang nearly enything off a wall by just slamming a hook or a screw into a stud.
This was awesome thank you about how much did it all cost you
Thanks, glad you liked it. I could build it today for about $1400 ish, in Canada.
Question ❓ are those pressure treated OSB boards or are they weather proofed just with the paint?
The exterior paint acts as a sealer
Are you not concerned that the 4x4 skids in contact with the ground will rot?
Not at all. As I said at the start it's all built on a bed of rock, not gravel because it holds moisture, rock allows for drainage. This way any water just seeps into the ground and the skids stay dry. The rock also makes them much less likely to push into the ground over time. And finally it's pressure treated wood so it's rated for 20-25 years of direct to ground contact
Great video. What did you do for the roof. Shingles?
Thanks. Yeah, it's shingles. I ran out of time to film it and just had to get it done because I had a blizzard inbound
Great series of videos. Very informative. I may have missed it, but how did you seal the roof?
Thanks, appreciate it! Glad I could help. I never had time to show the actual roofing process, like I said in the video, I was rushing to beat a blizzard that was coming in and the roof wasn't filmed, it was being done while I was still building and finishing the door and trim. But a basic shingle or asphalt paper roof would work
Nice video. Looking to build one shed identical to yours. About the roof shingles, how did you cap them at the top, for the water not to sip in? Thank you.
Thanks! Just a drip edge all the way around with an overhang. Good luck on yours!
@@JessedoesDIY Thank you
Hello Jesse, Really great detailed tutorial for building a DIY shed.
I have two questions for you.
1. The plan you put up on the link could it be used for 10'x10' shed instead for 8x10? I am planning to build a 10'x10' shed with the same height.
2. Can I build the shed on the Paver Stone? I have got the a base made out of Paver interlocking Stone which is 12'x12'. Do I need dig a hole in the paver & anchor the shed or Could I used 4x4 pressure treated as a base under the Shed floor just like you did.
I am located in Toronto, Canada. just to consider the extreme weather here.
Your advise will be greatly appreciated. Let me know please.
Thank you for making that video but I just wanted to know how much you spent all of the material
Thanks for watching
I spent $1700
@@JessedoesDIY thanks Robert
Question from novice, not judgement at all, just curious, because I have to build a shed:
Treated ground contact wood is okay to touch the ground for the base? The name's a no brainer I know but been told "wood always rots" so is it better to put the 4x4 treated beams on concrete blocks?
No problem. I'd recommend watching the individual videos and updates. I've shown and explained why it's fine many times but you are more than welcome to set it on blocks. This has a crushed natural rock base, not gravel as that has dirt in it. The rock doesn't hold moisture and keeps them dry, I just didn't have to bring in any rock as there was a playset there at one time and the rock just needed to be raked out.
Spray gun you used to paint what model is it and is there affordable gun I can buy ?
I bought it from Home Depot, it's a wagner flxio 710
Jesse, is there a way I can build a shed but have all the walls roof and floor be easily removable so I can move it? I'm in a rental home in Arizona and would love to build a shed but also move it away packing each frame on my trailer.
I'd probably build the floor frame asan assembly, and each wall as an assembly. Then just tie it all together from the inside with only a screw or two in each corner, and then some temporary brackets inside to hold it together. Then add the rood rafters in place, but, don't screw them down to the top plates, just use those hurricane ties I showed to fasten it down from the inside, add your rood sheeting and now your roof is a solid structure. Maybe leave the trim off for now, or lightly attach it. Then when you need to disassemble it you just remove the brackets inside and it should pop apart in sections
@@JessedoesDIY thank you!
Great work! Can you tell about sizes this shed?
Thanks. The shed is 8x10. The rear wall is 6.5' tall and the front is 8' tall
Aha! Get it! One more question: you haven’t used and foundation? Wood on a ground?
I spread rocks out first, mine were already there from an old play structure. Don't use gravel because it holds water, a bed of natural rocks about 25mm around gives a dry bed for the 4x4 pressure treated sleeper beams. Because the beams are rated for 25 years direct to ground contact, the rocks will help extend that a little further still. Then the floor is built upon those, which leaves an air gap so it doesn't hold or absorb ground moisture, it will stay completely dry. This floor will last the life of the shed no problem. I was a framer building houses for years and this is the way we built sheds for people because it follows all the normal building practices. I explain it all as I go in the individual videos as well as in the plans. I go over what type, size and length of wood to use, what type and length of screws, the amounts of everything as well as all the measurments if you want
Thank you, for a answers!
Anytime
How well does the Osb sheathing hold up to the weather, do you need to seal the ends toward the ground??
OSB will hold up just fine with a little care. It's already naturally rot resistant, the paint acts as a sealer protecting it further. A new coat of paint every 8-10 years and it will last 35 easy. The ends towards the ground should be fine for a long time because they stay dry being up on the 4×4 beams, no direct ground contact
hi, you put osb board for outside wall. is this ok for you weather ( rain & snow? ) will it damage soon?
Hey, OSB is actually slightly weather resistant from the glue inside of it bonding the wood together. Painting it seals it further so the wood is sealed from the weather. You'll just have to make sure to paint it again in like 8 years or so to keep it maintained but it'll last a good 30 years at least. Plus OSB is actually the sheeting material you do for houses or anything
What type of paint did you use? i live in Canada where we have winters.. how do you think this will hold up colder conditions?
I also live in Canada, hence my channel name. I'm in Saskatchewan specifically where it's brutal. I just used outdoor Premier Infinity from Canadian Tire. It's not so much about what brand, as long as it's outdoor specific paint you'll be good as paint relys on layers for protection. 2 coats upfront when its built, another coat a couple years later if it needs it, then every 5-8 years or as needed. Once it has a good thick coat of paint built up it'll last a long time
What was the total cost on the shed?
Thanks
$1250
How long did this take you to build? I am thinking about building one to use as a chicken coop.
I built it in just over 4 days, and another day and a half to caulk and paint
Good job could you show me the roof finish detail
Thanks. The only roof I showed is the structure in the dedicated roof video
can you share the li k of the plywood you use.. it is hard for me to fine it
I wish I could but that store won't let me share links. 4x8 OSB, 1/2" thick
@@JessedoesDIY can you provide me the storesku#
Do you happen to know number of material used ? Over all
It's all in the plans. Full materials list and types, breakdown and colored instructions
How much you was the materials?
All total for me it was $1700
How much money do you spend in this project?
I want to build mine!🙏🙏
$1700 total for me. Good luck on yours!
What size of wood did you use
There is a materials list in the description
Doesn’t show what size wood you used ? Looking for the size of the wall stoods
It is all listed in the plans in detail. It's all 2x4x8 for the wall studs
I didn’t understand what a king stud is and what it does sorry new to this.
What size is the 2×4
8' and 10'
How much do you spend?
I could build it today for around $1300
What would you say this cost you at the time of building it
$1700
Great job!
Where in Canada are you? Are you for hire?
Thanks! I'm in Saskatchewan and no I'm not lol
What size is it is it 10 by 10 or 12 by 10
It's 10' wide at the front and 8' deep to the back wall
3:00 in can’t watch, makes my back hurt 😂
Awesome vid! How many 2x4s and 4x8s did you need to complete this project?
Thanks! I literally just added a full materials list in the description for ya! Good luck on yours, keep me posted!
How much was this build
At the time it cost me $1700 all total
i dont know the wood its too exposed the paint will protect it a little more somewhat
The exposed wood is all treated or rot resistant. Treated wood is good for 30 years exposed, and the rot resistant stuff is sealed by paint. As long as you keep up a new coat of paint every 5-8 years or when needed, it'll last a long time
@JessieDoesDiy so that's why it's called the toe board...*kicks it in place...* lol
Lol
Nvm found it $1700 🤙🏽