


Things got off to a reasonable start back in September with the selection of the timber and cutting the first pieces for the prototype window, especially when I treated myself to a quartet of 1m F-clamps

The trouble started when I switched from cutting to drilling and fine tuning.


... but a nightmare to drill through, when the hard bands would force the bit to one side or the other; and similarly when I'd be trying to chisel a last millimetre of a rebate.
But in the end, the prototype got made and painted ...

... and four coats later, was ready for fitting.

Cue three months of doing other stuff, including sourcing an extra four double glazed panes because the prototype showed that the four originally intended for the second window would be 2cm too wide (the two openings - old shed doorways - are of slightly diffent widths, having being built about 100 years apart. But window no.2 was done by the end of January.

And so on to the kitchen door, which (thanks to the "learning process" of the two windows) went quite quickly. Roughly laid out ...

... dry fitted (the panel at the bottom is that in photo number 4 above) ...

...and assembled (not yet glazed) by the end of February.

Last week, I cleaned up the two panes that'll be going in there; I have the hinges and lock ready to mount, but the actual installation of the door will have to wait until I have a finished floor height to work with, which won't happen for several months.
The photos don't show it, but these two windows and the door form three points of a visual triangle in the courtyard, so were made to match each other. Despite much cursing and swearing during the construction process, I'm very happy with how they turned out, and how "identical" they look, even though they're all different dimensions.
The two skylights (for the bathroom) are made, primed and undercoated, now waiting for their final topcoat; as are the two components of the light tunnel (for the kitchen). I'll fit the skylights soon-ish, but the light tunnel requires making a hole in a wall 7m off the ground, something I'm not going to attempt in 60kmh winds and torrential rain.

Three more simple, non-opening windows are almost complete - frames are made (from salvaged oak ceiling boards), assembled and oiled, glass panes are cleaned and ready to go, and the indoor-facing components of an integral vent (because the windows won't open) are ready too.


However, as these will fit into exposed stone recesses, all three of which need a bit of angle grinding, cleaning up of the existing woodwork (lintels and anti-wolf bars) and repointing of the stonework, it'll probably be the end of March (at least) before they go in.
That just leaves the front door, also to be made from salvaged oak. It'll be pretty much the same style as the kitchen door, but slightly wider and a bit taller. I cleaned up all my remaining oak boards last week, picked the best of them for the major elements of the build, and will set about flattening them in the next couple of weeks. Have to build my flattening rig first ...
