Shingle style victorian architecture and history of shingle style homes hallmarks of shingle style.
Victorian style roof shingles.
This versatile product can be used in residential or commercial applications over solid wood sheathing on both roofs and walls making it ideal for restoration projects or new construction requiring a historic victorian or classical traditional feel.
The berridge victorian and classic shingles create a traditional design look.
This impression of the passage of time is enhanced by the use of shingles.
For this reason ice water shield is required on the entire roof surface.
Rambling massing a shingle skin and an era may be all these houses have in.
These metal shingles bring a vintage look to your beautiful home.
Asphalt shingles can also come in varying shapes and sizes for added victorian appeal and durability.
In addition its smaller size and the need to pop lines to keep rows even means it installs slower than other metal shingles as well.
Unlike most other metal shingles victorian is water shedding but not water tight.
For example asphalt shingles can come in scallop diamond and zig zag shapes.
The shingle style was highly interpretive and imaginative exhibiting a range of motifs from.
Victorian architects managed to use common cedar shingles to wildly decorative effect.
When railroads reached the pacific northwest in the 1890s western red cedar rot resistant and abundant soon dominated the market across all house styles.
Let s take a look at how victorian metal roof shingles changed over the years.
Asphalt while asphalt roofs weren t used during the victorian period they can be made to resemble victorian style roofing such as wood shakes or slate.
Victorian shingle can be installed on slopes as low as 4 12 and is designed for installation on solid deck applications.
Victorian stamped shingles these were developed for restoration applications to match the authentic appearance of nineteenth century metal roofing shingles.
These architects took simple pieces of wood albeit ones handsomely cut across their butt ends and placed them in rows to form distinctive patterns that managed to draw the eyes of observers as effectively as a wolf whistle turns heads on a crowded street.
Architects of the shingle style emulated colonial houses plain shingled surfaces as well as their massing whether in the single exaggerated gable of mckim mead and white s low house or in the complex massing of kragsyde.