Thursday, March 31, 2011

Little details

It's odd in the way we sometimes focus on the big. Humans can take in so much, process and move on. We watch screen within screen within screen, and not bat an eye - clever. We'll stand on the rim of the Grand Canyon for fifteen minutes, scan and leave fulfilled - sad. We will also scrutinize the Heavens and contemplate all that we can and can't see - imaginative. Sometimes, however, we miss the micro in favor of the macro. This detail fits in the micro category, at least in terms of a house. Here are three photos of the ubiquitous drip edge, meant to shed rain water from the top of door and window trim. No it isn't the Heavens or the Grand Canyon, but it is a lot more tangible.

This drip edge, the over hanging lip, has protected this
window for 125 years. The proportions are in keeping
to the heavy window trim.  Very pleasing.
Here is a new drip edge milled to match the existing. It was
made from scrap pressure treated wood and took
approximately five minutes to complete.
This house was renovated using stock, off the shelf, material.
The drip edge, in comparison, appears anemic. 
 

3 comments:

  1. Is a "drip edge" meant to protect the window from streaking, or from water getting in, or both?

    ReplyDelete
  2. It protects the top of the window/door trim by shedding the water away. Otherwise the water would sit on a flat surface and, as water tends to do, find a way in behind the trim. The window glass gets wet no matter what.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I thought there will be people in side the house
    and the people inside the house will have good knowledge about various languages

    by the way nice glass house

    Chandler Landscaping Contractors

    ReplyDelete

About Me

I am a landscape designer based in Key West, Florida and Surry, Maine. I place much attention with the house, not as an adjunct to the garden but as an integral element. This symbiotic relationship will always produce the best and most natural environment. The best description for my views on the relationship between the garden and the house comes from the naturalist Charles Keeler, “landscape design with occasional rooms in case of rain”