Jacob
What goes around comes around.
Somebody contacted me for sash window making advice a few days ago but I accidentally trashed the email. If he sees this - sorry please try again!
If you are lucky you get asked to repair/service old joinery and there is no better learning process*. As well as learning how it was put together you learn what/why things fail. Knowing what won't work is more important than knowing what will - it's the weakest link. Knowing what bodged repairs don't work is valuable too, you might also come across successful repairs.Argus":113cocnm said:.......Taking scrapped units apart to study their construction today is easier said than done; in my experience they are scarce and tend to reveal a great deal more about botched repairs............
Argus":ly9u4q39 said:I do hope that you are reunited with your enquirer soon, Jacob – it’s an area of woodworking that has long interested me from a distance.
However, this post has prompted the thought that sliding sash windows, their history, making and repair is a huge grey area considering how many there still are installed all over the world. Taking scrapped units apart to study their construction today is easier said than done; in my experience they are scarce and tend to reveal a great deal more about botched repairs.
There is not much literature of substance still available on the design and construction of sliding sash windows. A few fragments in old publications and reprints. Lost Art Press in the USA, reprinted a Victorian text on window and door making some while ago but it does not go into much detail – it was, after all a small pocket book – but it does state that skills were inherited on the job, passed on and this is where much of the knowledge has gone to the graves with the craftsmen. Only incomplete sets of sash planes, ovolos and scribing sets remain
Except for essential conservation, current building regulations have largely confined wooden sliding sash window sets to museum pieces, replaced by plastics; despite casements being on the face of it an easier construction, sash windows were universal up to the 1920’s – even for the thousands of quite humble terraced two-up, two-down terraces built by the Victorians.
Is there an unfulfilled need for a good, detailed book on the subject? I hope so.
Just an observation.......
Argus":3vy67e0r said:There is not much literature of substance still available on the design and construction of sliding sash windows. A few fragments in old publications and reprints. Lost Art Press in the USA, reprinted a Victorian text on window and door making some while ago but it does not go into much detail
thomashenry":1u8en29f said:I really wish Paul Sellers (or someone like that) would do a thurough, definitive video series on making sash windows by hand - both the sashes and the box frame. I think it would be a great help to many people, and help preserve an important part of our craft heritage.
Trevanion":39assru8 said:thomashenry":39assru8 said:I really wish Paul Sellers (or someone like that) would do a thurough, definitive video series on making sash windows by hand - both the sashes and the box frame. I think it would be a great help to many people, and help preserve an important part of our craft heritage.
I could always take photos of the next sash job I do and do a thread on the forum if that would interest anyone.
AndyT":2s3213m5 said:Personally, I'd love to see one made by hand, but commercial machine based work is interesting as well.
I think common sense rules - I've never heard of anybody having a prob even with total replacement/replication. They aren't out to get you.John Brown":1lczxt89 said:I would also welcome a sticky how-to on sash construction, although I have concerns that I might be breaking the law if I don't have FENSA certification.
What is the fine line between repair and replacement?
If I replace the glass one year, and replace the frame next, are we getting into Trigger's broom territory?
John Brown":hfap7x1p said:I have concerns that I might be breaking the law if I don't have FENSA certification.
What is the fine line between repair and replacement?
If I replace the glass one year, and replace the frame next, are we getting into Trigger's broom territory?
Enter your email address to join: