Wednesday 31 October 2018

How to Install Your Own DIY Security System


Ask This Old House home technology expert Ross Trethewey installs a DIY security system. Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Time: 1-2 hours Cost: $800 and up Skill Level: Beginner Tools List: Philips screwdriver Shopping List: DIY Security System Motion Sensors Smart Doorbell Camera Indoor Security Camera Steps: 1. Plug in the security system hub at a location near the front door. To prevent it from being unplugged, it comes with a outlet cover plate that will hold the plug in place. That is installed using the same screw as the cover plate. 2. Download the app that corresponds with the security system and then scan the hub’s QR code to register it to your phone. 3. Scan the motion sensors using the app and then secure them to desired doors and windows using the provided adhesive. Put the motion sensor on the trim or wall closest to the door and window, and place the contact sensor on the door and/or window itself. 4. Rewire the smart doorbell camera to the existing doorbell chime using the screwdriver. Replace the doorbell cover plate outside with the smart doorbell. This should only require a few screws. 5. Identify any vulnerable areas in the house that have not yet been covered and install an indoor camera to cover those areas. It just needs to be plugged in and the QR code will need to be scanned. Resources: Ross installed a variety of different sensors and cameras that are manufactured by Nest (https://nest.com/), including the Nest Secure alarm system, Nest Hello video doorbell, Nest Cam IQ Indoor, and Nest Detect motion sensors. To install these devices, all you need is a screwdriver. Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, ask this old house, ross trethewey, security system, install, smart home technology Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2q7OOF8 Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

How to Remember Birthdays | Memory Techniques


Forget Something? Beef up your memory with these products: Unlimited Memory: How to Use Learning Strategies to Learn Faster: http://amzn.to/1ZhQd79 The Memory Book: The Guide to Improving Your Memory at Work: http://amzn.to/1GyJ4DK Moonwalking with Einstein: The Art and Science of Remembering: http://amzn.to/1R1vC0U The Memory Jogger 2: Tools for Continuous Improvement: http://amzn.to/1Oo5pMt Memory Improvement: How To Improve Your Memory In Just 30 Days: http://amzn.to/1Oo5pMt Watch more How to Improve Your Memory videos: https://ift.tt/2Ru5hPH Hi, I'm Barry Reitman, author of "Secrets, Tips, and Tricks of a Powerful Memory" and I'd like to discuss how to remember people's birthdays or other important dates. I'm going to suggest that you start a small system of your own. I'm going to give you one that I use to remember each month. You can certainly replace my pictures with yours. That's okay. What I use for January is a party hat. New Year's Eve, January. For February, a valentine, a heart, maybe with an arrow going through it. Valentine's Day is always February. March, I think the easiest thing is to picture a parade and people marching and so on. April, showers. May, flowers, and June, bride. Now, the second part of a birthday that you want to remember, of course, is the number. Throughout this series there are a number of ways to remember numbers. Let's use the rhyme system. So if my friend Paul, my picture for the name Paul is to pull. I pull on a feature, perhaps a large nose, and I pull down on it, or a beard and I pull down on it. Pull. I see myself pulling on a facial feature. I know it's Paul. And Paul's birthday is March 19th. Well, that's March 1, 9. In my rhyme scheme, which you'll see in one of the other videos in this series, number 1 is bun, a hamburger bun, and number 9 is a glass of wine. So I'm going to picture a sandwich. And you know what? It's not a ham sandwich, or an egg sandwich, or a bacon and egg sandwich. It's a wine sandwich. I'm going to see a glass of wine turned on its side, two pieces of bread holding it together. So there's my wine sandwich, number 19, March 19th. I'm going to put it all together. March, a marching band. And there's a marching band going by, and there's my friend Paul. And he's trying to walk in front of the marching band, and I have to pull him away. And it's tough to get his attention. Do you know why? Because he's eating a wine sandwich. Does that sound stupid, dopey? That's what makes it work. If you see that picture, and you're used to using those pictures for the months, and your pictures for the numbers, in this case the rhyming scheme, and you know you're pulling on Paul, Paul, pull, you put it all together and you can't forget Paul's birthday is on the 19th of March.

Jack-o-Lantern Candle From Scratch


Enter offer code "makeeverything" at Squarespace.com for 10% off your first purchase, or visit: https://ift.tt/2jPdeTD Before moving on to making more complex light sources like a light bulb, I wanted to first start out figuring out how to make some spooky candles using a variety of methods from molded tallow candles, dipped bees wax, and an attempt to hydrogenate my own vegetable wax. || In This Video || Our Camera Gear: - GH4: https://goo.gl/Kpgf9D - FS5: https://goo.gl/aPd428 - Dracast Light Panels: https://goo.gl/agbBSU - GoPro Hero 5: https://goo.gl/nDbjBk - Karma Drone: https://goo.gl/F16GWj || SUBSCRIBE || YouTube Channel: http://bit.ly/1OmesgS || SUPPORT || Patreon - https://ift.tt/1RzRaSL Spreadshirt - https://ift.tt/1OX2KHI Special Thanks to our Patrons at $15 per month or higher: Sandy Riis, Stian Andreassen, Daniel Laux, Winfield Jones, Liz Roth, Antonio Rios-Ochoa, Jenny Wolf-Matte, Quintin, Tim Reiche, Dylan Rich, Jason Lewis, Susan M. George, Lana Sinapayen, Stephen C Strausbaugh, Meinhard Absalon, Jason Kaczmarsky, Avinash Rajaraman, Andrew Nichols, Patrick Davis, Tyler Greeson, Remi_Scarlet, Skylar MacDonald, Steven Ingles, Brett Moran || SOCIAL || Facebook: http://ow.ly/X4rJC Twitter: http://ow.ly/X4rS3 (@HTMeverything) Instagram: http://ow.ly/X4rXs || SERIES || Sandwich - http://bit.ly/1ZVGNRn Suit - http://bit.ly/1NsQri8 Bottle - http://bit.ly/1QlTU6C Thanksgiving Dinner - http://bit.ly/1UjLa1R Root Beer Float - http://bit.ly/1OGfphU Book - http://bit.ly/1SF23Gx Chocolate Bar - http://bit.ly/2085HIs Coffee - http://bit.ly/2jllv0I Eyeglasses - http://bit.ly/2jlispn Microscope and Telescope: http://bit.ly/2nQCRn7 How To Brew Everything: http://bit.ly/2kJb47E Meet The Makers - http://bit.ly/23ldFlS || ABOUT || Today, getting what you need is as easy as a trip to the store. From food to clothing, energy, medicine, and so much more, Andy George will discover what it takes to make everything from scratch. His mission is to understand the complex processes of manufacturing that is often taken for granted and do it all himself. Each week he’s traveling the world to bypass the modern supply chain in order to harvest raw materials straight from the source. Along the way, he’s answering the questions you never thought to ask. Music by the talented Taylor Lewin http://taylorlewin.com

Monday 29 October 2018

How to Choose and Use Sandpaper


Ask This Old House general contractor Tom Silva teaches the basics of sanding. Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Cost: $2 and up Skill Level: Beginner Tools List for Sandpaper: Random orbit sander Finish sander Belt sander Shopping List: Sandpaper Steps: 1. Start out with a lower number grit sandpaper, like 60 or 80, depending on the material being sanded, and do multiple passes. Increase the grit with each new pass. 2. Don’t skip grits. If you start at 80, you should go to 100 next, then 120, etc. Skipping grits will force the higher grits to work harder to smooth out the material, so it ends up wasting more time than just committing to each interval. 3. Keep the surface clean between passes. Use a sander with a vacuum or a vacuum bag to keep the mess down. 4. Use a belt sander if you have a lot of material to sand down. They’re good for aggressive work. 5. Finish sanders are good for corners and trim and angles if you’re prepping for paint. 6. Random orbit sanders are good for most universal sanding projects. Resources: All the different types of sandpaper and sanders Tom demonstrated can be found at home centers. Tom recommends buying a wide variety of grits to ensure the material gets sanded properly. Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, tom silva, ask this old house, kevin o'connor, sandpaper, choose, sanders, tools Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2q7OOF8 Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

How to Say "Poland is Wonderful Country" | Polish Lessons


Like these Polish Lessons !!! Check out the official app http://apple.co/1LoEGIy Cześć! Looking to learn Polish? Polish, Q&S: Learn to Speak: http://amzn.to/1NnXyhG Polish, Basic: Learn to Speak and Understand Polish: http://amzn.to/1FXlOVd Polish For Dummies 1st Edition: http://amzn.to/1Omy3xn Berlitz Polish Phrase Book & Dictionary: http://amzn.to/1VEn0DZ Polish: 101 Common Phrases Kindle Edition : http://amzn.to/1VFnCUF Watch more How to Speak Polish videos: https://ift.tt/2CNAPM6 How to order water. To say, may I have a water, please. Mogę prośić o wodę? Mogę prośić o wodę? So, let's slow this one down and work it out. The first word is Mogę, mogę. The E, with the accent underneath it, is an elm sign. So it's moe-geh. The second word is prośić. The S, with the accent is a sh sound, and then the C, with an accent, is a ch sound, so it's sheech. Sheech. One more time. Sheech. The whole word is prośić o wodę. The Ws sound like Vs. And then the E, with the accent underneath it, sounds like elm. So, it's vode. So moe-geh pro-sheech o vode. Let's try that one more time, full speed. Mogę prośić o wodę. There's a lot of elms there, I know. But give it a try. Really good, I'm impressed. Great. To say, no ice, you say, bez lodu. This one's easy. Bez lodu. Bez loh-doo. Bez lodu. Go ahead, let me hear you say it. Very good. That's how you order water.

Gordon Ramsay Shows How To Cook Rabbit | The F Word


Rabbit fricassee with tagliatelle. Add The F Word on Facebook: https://ift.tt/1KOqboh... To find out more about Gordon Ramsay visit: https://ift.tt/MNlxUn Gordon Ramsay on Facebook https://ift.tt/JnOoCj Follow Gordon Ramsay on Twitter

Sunday 28 October 2018

How to Heat a Garage Workshop


Ask This Old House plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey travels to Akron, Ohio to install a garage heater. Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Time: 3-4 hours Cost: $500 Skill Level: Expert Tools List for Heating a Garage Workshop: Drill driver Pipe cutters Shopping List: Radiant Workshop Heater Lag bolts Washers for bolts Spade bit Drywall screws Flexible gas line Gas pipe fittings Gas pipe in various sizes Pipe dope Vent Thermostat Steps: 1. Working with gas is extremely dangerous and should only be left to a licensed professional. 2. Shut the gas off at the meter. 3. Determine a location to mount the heater that’s easily accessible to the gas line. To give the heater more range, try mounting it in a corner. 4. Mount the bracket for the heater to the chosen location using bolts and a drill. Be sure to follow the instructions to ensure proper clearance from the walls and ceiling. 5. Slide the heater onto the mounting bracket and secure it with nuts that come with the heater. 6. Drill a hole into the wall or ceiling using the drill with a spade bit to connect the gas piping. 7. Screw the mounting bracket provided with the heater into the wall or ceiling using the drill and some drywall screws. 8. Connect the flexible gas line to the existing gas line and then pass it through the bracket. 9. Thread the fitting and brass connection that come with the heater onto the flexible gas line and then screw the fitting onto the bracket. 10. Connect the flexible gas line to the heater using a variety of gas pipe, fittings, elbows, and nipples. Use pipe dope to secure all the connections. 11. Drill a hole on the other end of the garage and install a vent to ensure there is another air flow to allow exhaust to escape the room. 12. Connect the thermostat to the heater and attach it to the wall. 13. Turn the gas back on. Resources: Richard installed the High Intensity Radiant Workshop Heater, manufactured by Mr. Heater (https://ift.tt/2aKTfOw). The other materials Richard used to install the heater, including the gas piping, the flexible gas line, and the plywood to hold the bracket for the heater, can all be found at home centers. Expert assistance with this segment was provided by Echols Heating and Cooling (https://ift.tt/2JlYDYI) Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, ask this old house, richard trethewey, heating, garage, workshop, install Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2q7OOF8 Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

Saturday 27 October 2018

Build It | Rough Sawn Headboard


Ask This Old House general contractor Tom Silva and host Kevin O’Connor build a headboard using rustic barnboard. Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Time: 3-4 hours Cost: $80 Skill Level: Moderate Tools: Paintbrush Track saw Miter Saw Drill Caulking gun Bradnailer Air compressor Shopping List: ½” birch plywood 2x4” framing lumber 5/4” pine Framing screws Rough sawn boards Black paint Construction adhesive Weathered wood accelerator finish Steps: 1. Paint a large sheet of birch plywood black to hide the gaps of the rough boards. 2. Cut the plywood to rough size using the track saw. 3. Secure the plywood to the back of some 2x4”s with wood glue and framing screws to stiffen out the plywood. 4. Lay out the rough sawn boards on top of the plywood. Cut any overhanging pieces with the miter saw and reuse them in the next course, depending on their length. Be sure the joints of the boards do not line up. 5. Secure the boards to the plywood using construction adhesive and the bradnailer. 6. Once the boards are secure, use the track saw to make a clean cut on both ends of the plywood. 7. Determine the width of the headboard. Tom suggests using the bed frame as a template. Center that on the plywood, and then divide the overhang on each side in half. 8. Using the track saw, make two opposing miter cuts on each side of the bed frame. Start with the outside cut so you have somewhere to rest the track on. 9. Use the construction adhesive and the bradnailer to secure the overhang to the top of the plywood. 10. Cut the 5/4” pine to size for the top of the headboard. Apply a weathered finish to the board to match the rest of the headboard and let that dry. 11. Attach the top to the rest of the headboard from underneath using framing screws. Resources: Tom and Kevin built the headboard out of 1/2” x 4” Weathered Hardwood Board, manufactured by Weaber Lumber (https://ift.tt/2pavMMY ) and available at most home centers. The wood glue and construction adhesive Tom used to secure the boards to the plywood is manufactured by Gorilla Glue (www.gorillatough.com ). The finish Kevin used for the top piece of the headboard is called Weathered Wood Accelerator, which is manufactured by Varathane (https://ift.tt/2z9aO6D ) and available at most home centers. All the other materials Tom and Kevin used for this project, including the plywood, brad nailer, paint, and paintbrushes, can all be found at home centers. Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, ask this old house, tom silva, kevin o'connor, build it, woodworking, bedroom, headboard, bed, furniture Watch the full episode: Stone Walkway, Rustic Headboard | Ask TOH https://ift.tt/2yj8g65 Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

Friday 26 October 2018

Helping Kids Deal w/ a Deployed Parent | Child Anxiety


No child should suffer depression and anxiety without help, seek professional help for you and your child and here’s some resources for educating yourself along the way: Freeing Your Child from Negative Thinking: http://amzn.to/1jOAGeu How To Get Unstuck From The Negative Muck: http://amzn.to/1Pj1b7O Depression and Your Child: A Guide for Parents and Caregivers: http://amzn.to/1LiG97G What to Do When You're Scared and Worried: A Guide for Kids: http://amzn.to/1jOAOuH What to Do When You Worry Too Much: A Kid's Guide to Overcoming Anxiety: http://amzn.to/1JThS2M Watch more How to Deal with Child Anxiety & Depression videos: https://ift.tt/2yD5sB8 I'm here to talk to you about how to help your child with a deployed parent. Now, when you think about deployment, it really is many things and is not just one day. There is pre deployment and then there is deployment and then actually, eventually, there is when that person comes back. There is a couple things to think about when you think about how to help your children. One is, the age of your child. The other is, what phase of the deployment this is and how many deployments. So, let's talk about deployment itself. There is the pre deployment phase where often there is the getting ready and there is lots of kinds of feelings and just behaviors that start to happen with the parent that is going to be deployed and with the family that will be staying behind. So, once that pre deployment phase kicks in, already there may be a different routine and lots of new feelings and sometimes problematic feelings. But on the other hand, you have that family still a family. So some of the things that you see down the road, once the person is deployed, won't be evident yet. Then, you have the deployment itself and then there is goodbye and then there is that person not being there anymore. So in the pre deployment phase, you may have been taking about how they handle different things or different roles and responsibilities the spouse would take on but then, the reality is what happens day to day when the person is actually deployed and no longer there. So I think people need to think about even that pre phase and how to help children. Now, in terms of helping children, you want to think again about their ages. A very young child, maybe an infant, a toddler, a preschooler, they don't necessarily understand the concept of going away or for three months or 18 months or remember like dad went away the last time or remember when mom was away because she was working with the military. So they don't have that sense of time. So they will be much more focused on the present and they are going to reacting to, maybe, tension in the house, change in routine, and then, once the deployment happens, they may have some of those behaviors in terms of searching or feeling lonely or feeling distressed or have more tantrums. Sometimes, the more you can keep their routine the same, the more you can have a structure in place, the better it will be because it will comforting for them. When you get children that are little older, school age, and certainly teenagers, then they understand much more about what's going on. Then may want to be more involved in making plans, taking on new roles in the family. They may also be scared or angry or worried. They may also want to be responsible and want to help starting at the pre deployment phase and certainly, once the person is deployed. So as you can see, there is a wide range of reactions and feelings that kids can have and certainly, the spouses and the people that are going away may have teenagers, of course, may have all sorts of other kinds of feelings that they have related to the reality of a situation. They are trying to be independent, they are trying to form opinions and they may want to have different kinds of discussions with you about your leaving and what that can mean for them and for the family as well as for you. When it comes to deployment, this is the very general way to look at it. But there is so many other things that you need to think about, in terms of your own family and situation. So when there is a deployment, sometimes, the family may be moving as well and is this the first time a family has moved? Is this the third time a family has moved? Is this the first deployment or had there been multiple ones? So again, you want to think about what you need to do to help everyone make the transition from one phase to the next and every time there is a deployment, you really want to think what worked the last time and what may be new and different this time. And now, once somebody is deployed, we have some terrific ways to keep people connected these days in t

Thursday 25 October 2018

Preview | A Charleston Family House is Reborn | The Jamestown Net-Zero House


New apprentices join the team in Rhode Island as the roof goes up. The homeowners visit a cabinet showroom to finalize their plans. The house gets sheathed. It’s the finish line at Judith’s house in Charleston. Kevin and Tom take the grand tour. Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, tom silva, Jamestown Net-Zero, episode, preview, season 40 Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2qc2XRO Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

Preview | Garage Heat, DIY Security System | Ask TOH


Richard travels to Akron, Ohio to install a garage heater; Tom teaches the basics of sanding; Ross installs a DIY security system; Mark investigates a strange issue happening to foundations in the Northeast. Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, tom silva, ask this old house, season 17, episode, preview Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2q7OOF8 Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

LIVE - Brookline Plumbing with Kevin and Richard


Kevin and Richard show the major plumbing work going on in the front of the property as a crew replaces both the sewer line and water main. Video from inside the sewer pipe revealed several breaks and a rats nest under the street.

TOH: Trade School- Exclusive Preview of Swedish Style!


Host Kevin O'Connor finds general contractor Tom Silva working on the architect's plans to vary ceiling height on the first floor for dramatic effect. Kevin lends a hand in the living room as they use two-by-fours and strapping to drop the ceiling by eight inches in two key places. Then, Kevin travels to Fairfield, CT to meet designers Edie Van Breems and Rhonda Eleish to learn how our house's Scandinavian modern style evolved from more rustic Swedish country interiors. Back in Cambridge, master carpenter Norm Abram shows Kevin the framing progress on the second floor where there will be three bedrooms, a laundry, and a shared bath. Norm notes where Tom made the ceilings flat without necessarily needing to be level in the bedrooms. On the third floor, they review the framing upgrades, and Kevin helps Tom install a new skylight so it will never leak.

Wednesday 24 October 2018

How to Choose and Use Painter’s Tape


Ask This Old House painter Mauro Henrique explains the uses and techniques for different types of painter’s tape. Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Cost: $2 and up Skill Level: Beginner Shopping List: Painter’s Tape Steps: 1. Only use painter’s tape if it’s really needed. If you plan to paint the whole room, it may not be necessary. Start with the ceiling and work your way down. With a careful hand, you can cleanly paint an entire room without risking peeling any of the paint off with tape. 2. Don’t use masking tape in place of painter’s tape. It has a high adhesion, which can peel off or chip some of the surface being protected. 3. Read the labels on the tape to determine which one will work best for your project based on the following guidelines: a. Use very high adhesion tape for exterior projects b. Use medium adhesion tape for interior projects that will require a longer period of time to complete. c. Use light adhesion for interior projects with delicate surfaces (ex: wallpaper) or that will only need to be up for a day or two. Light adhesion tape is least likely to damage the surface underneath, so aim to use that kind as much as possible. 4. The different colors of painter’s tape only indicate which manufacturer they belong to and don’t necessarily have different purposes. 5. To apply the tape, use long sections of tape at a time, at least 18”. Press hard against the edge being protected to ensure no paint can slip underneath the tape, but don’t press all the tape down on the surface if you don’t have to. 6. When painting, paint just as carefully as you would if there were no tape at all. The tape is really just meant to act as extra insurance. 7. As soon as the paint is dry, remove the tape. Peel off one corner and pull the tape away from the wall at roughly a 45 degree angle to prevent damage to the surface. Resources: Mauro demonstrated a variety of different painter’s tapes. He suggests simply reading the label of the tape to see where each tape is best used. The color of the tape varies by manufacturer, not by application. Each of the tapes Mauro demonstrated can be found at home centers and painting supply stores. Expert assistance with this segment was provided by Mauro’s Painting (https://ift.tt/2s5JDZY ). Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, ask this old house, mauro henrique, kevin o'connor, painting, tools, tape Watch the full episode: Stone Walkway, Rustic Headboard | Ask TOH https://ift.tt/2yj8g65 Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

How to Order Water in Polish | Polish Lessons


Like these Polish Lessons !!! Check out the official app http://apple.co/1LoEGIy Cześć! Looking to learn Polish? Polish, Q&S: Learn to Speak: http://amzn.to/1NnXyhG Polish, Basic: Learn to Speak and Understand Polish: http://amzn.to/1FXlOVd Polish For Dummies 1st Edition: http://amzn.to/1Omy3xn Berlitz Polish Phrase Book & Dictionary: http://amzn.to/1VEn0DZ Polish: 101 Common Phrases Kindle Edition : http://amzn.to/1VFnCUF Watch more How to Speak Polish videos: https://ift.tt/2PmvKB9 How to say "What's your number?" Jaki jest twoj numer? Jaki jest twoj numer? Let's break this down to four words. Jaki, the 'J's' sound like 'Y's', Jaki. Jest. Twoj, the 'W's' sound like 'V's', so twoj. And the 'O' with the accent is an 'U'. Twoj. There's that 'J' again, with the 'Y', so it's twoj. Numer. Jaki jest twoj numer. Go ahead, ask me for my number. I'd give it to you, but I'd have to kill you. But, good job. So to ask, "Are you on Facebook?", you say, "Jestes na Facebook?" Jestes na Facebook? So Jestes, the 'S' is 'H' sound when it has the accent over it. Jestes, na, Facebook. Instead of book, it's buk. Facebook. Jestes na Facebook? Go ahead, ask me. Why yes, I am. Thank you. Good job. And that's how you ask for somebody's number.

From Rock to Copper Metal


This video was sponsored by LastPass http://bit.ly/2OyIQLU I collect some copper ore from an abandoned mine in California and extract the copper metal out of it through electrowinning. || In This Video || Our Camera Gear: - GH4: https://goo.gl/Kpgf9D - FS5: https://goo.gl/aPd428 - Dracast Light Panels: https://goo.gl/agbBSU - GoPro Hero 5: https://goo.gl/nDbjBk - Karma Drone: https://goo.gl/F16GWj || SUBSCRIBE || YouTube Channel: http://bit.ly/1OmesgS || SUPPORT || Patreon - https://ift.tt/1RzRaSL Spreadshirt - https://ift.tt/1OX2KHI Special Thanks to our Patrons at $15 per month or higher: Sandy Riis, Stian Andreassen, Daniel Laux, Winfield Jones, Liz Roth, Antonio Rios-Ochoa, Jenny Wolf-Matte, Quintin, Tim Reiche, Dylan Rich, Jason Lewis, Susan M. George, Lana Sinapayen, Stephen C Strausbaugh, Meinhard Absalon, Jason Kaczmarsky, Avinash Rajaraman, Andrew Nichols, Patrick Davis, Tyler Greeson, Remi_Scarlet, Skylar MacDonald, Steven Ingles, Brett Moran || SOCIAL || Facebook: http://ow.ly/X4rJC Twitter: http://ow.ly/X4rS3 (@HTMeverything) Instagram: http://ow.ly/X4rXs || SERIES || Sandwich - http://bit.ly/1ZVGNRn Suit - http://bit.ly/1NsQri8 Bottle - http://bit.ly/1QlTU6C Thanksgiving Dinner - http://bit.ly/1UjLa1R Root Beer Float - http://bit.ly/1OGfphU Book - http://bit.ly/1SF23Gx Chocolate Bar - http://bit.ly/2085HIs Coffee - http://bit.ly/2jllv0I Eyeglasses - http://bit.ly/2jlispn Microscope and Telescope: http://bit.ly/2nQCRn7 How To Brew Everything: http://bit.ly/2kJb47E Meet The Makers - http://bit.ly/23ldFlS || ABOUT || Today, getting what you need is as easy as a trip to the store. From food to clothing, energy, medicine, and so much more, Andy George will discover what it takes to make everything from scratch. His mission is to understand the complex processes of manufacturing that is often taken for granted and do it all himself. Each week he’s traveling the world to bypass the modern supply chain in order to harvest raw materials straight from the source. Along the way, he’s answering the questions you never thought to ask. Music by the talented Taylor Lewin http://taylorlewin.com

Monday 22 October 2018

How to Read the Devil Card | Tarot Cards


Unlock the mysteries of Tarot: The Complete Guide to the Tarot: http://amzn.to/1Pj0Div The Tarot Bible: The Definitive Guide to the Cards: http://amzn.to/1LlxTzz Chakra Wisdom Oracle Cards: http://amzn.to/1hrj3zE The Essential Tarot Kit: Book and Card Set: http://amzn.to/1ZdkUu5 The Rider Tarot Deck Cards: http://amzn.to/1OmCOXQ Watch more How to Read Tarot Cards videos: https://ift.tt/2J9Bxoh Hello, I'm Ellen Goldberg, and I welcome you to a tarot moment with the School of Oracles.  In this segment, we're going to look at the devil.  Someone with whom one must have a conversation, the dweller on the threshold, as you progress, because some time or other we must confront our shadow.  This is a very interesting and complex card, because now we begin the series of the last seven cards of the major arcana.  They also represent, aside from all their meanings and symbolism, the seven stages of spiritual enlightenment.  And can you believe it? This is stage one.  Stage one is called "Consciousness of bondage," because if you don't know you're in prison, how are you ever gonna get out?  It's the aching discontent we feel and the need and yearning we need for change that is the beginning of our ascent into a higher state of being.   This card is ruled by the sign of Capricorn, and so there is something, the goat, of course, and we see him as a goat-headed god here in this card.  He has a very curious kind of hand.  Let's see if I can make it.  A hand gesture, it is not from some other planet or TV show.  It's an old mudra, and it means, "what you see is all there is."  And it's just that, taking everything at face value, which is something that helps us to really feel less than: less inspired, more depressed, because there is a great world beyond simply the material, but the devil would like you to believe this is it.  You'll notice that he sits on a half cube rather than a whole cube, and that means he's best on half knowledge rather than whole knowledge.  His hebrew letter, "ayin," means "eye," and it is our most important sense tool, but through it, we see appearances only.  Notice how the woman in the, "two of swords," has a blindfold when she goes in for inner peace, where many of the characters that we meet, like the hermit, have his eyes closed to show that they're looking with interior vision.  We cannot rely just on appearances.  But the devil is kind of a joke the way he's drawn, with kind of chicken feet and a furry bottom.  And, his light, his torch, rather than being held aloft, is turned downwards, igniting and inflaming the passions of the man, as in the lover's card, and this might be called almost a reverse image of the lover's card 'cause the lover's card is number six, and this is card number fifteen. Of course, right away we see it in roman numerals, but if you added one and five they equal six and it refers back to the lovers.  And here the devil is in the same place as the angel, and the man and woman are in their respective places as well, but here they are beastialized.  They have horns, they have tails, each of a different type.  The man's passions are being inflamed, and he looks at the female.   The female in this card is not looking for advice from the heavenly angel as she does in the lovers, but whatever suggestion the self-conscious mind, represented by the man, is giving to her is going to bear fruit, and that is why she has a tail that looks like a kind of a lovely bunch of grapes or fruit, because the sub-conscious brings us whatever we really truly believe and put into it.  This card is a necessary card.  If you have to confront it and feel a little frightened to meet the dweller, to look at your own shadow, then bring the wonderful angel that you have met in the previous card from temperance to stand at your side with you, you don't have to do this alone.  In a fine book, I don't know if it's still in print, called "The Rabbi's Tarot," it was said that in the long history of mankind, there has been no one who has found their way to god without first having gone to the devil to learn the path there.  When this comes on a higher polarity, its frustration as a spur to action, it's hard work and endurance, things that we get from Capricorn.  It's understanding the limitations are not real.  Look at the chains around those peoples' necks, they're so loose, they could lift them up easily if they wanted to.  Their bondage is illusionary.  On the lower polarity, you're caught in your personal hell.  You know when Dante went down to the inferno, down to the very lowest rung, and he finally meets the devil, is he jumping up and down on hot coals? No, he's frozen in ice, all he sees is him from the neck or shoulders up, and eve

Amateur Cook Burns Soup | The F Word


If the soup is black, it's probably burnt. Add The F Word on Facebook: https://ift.tt/1KOqboh... To find out more about Gordon Ramsay visit: https://ift.tt/MNlxUn Gordon Ramsay on Facebook https://ift.tt/JnOoCj Follow Gordon Ramsay on Twitter

How to Install a Rustic Stone Walkway


Ask This Old House mason Mark McCullough installs a front walkway for a homeowner using natural stone. Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Time: 5-6 hours Cost: $2000 Skill Level: Moderate to Expert Tools: Safety glasses Hearing protection Shovel Pickaxe Wheelbarrow Compactor Trowel Rubber mallet Level Masonry hammer Shopping List: Natural stone steppers Spray paint Stone pack material (crushed stone and stone dust) Stone dust Plastic edging Steps: 1. Before doing any project that requires digging, always contact your utility locating service to identify the location of water lines, gas lines, etc. 2. Use spray paint or some other type of marker to determine where the path will go to help make digging easier. 3. Use a pick axe to loosen the soil in between the lines of the new walkway. Then, use a shovel to dig out the path. Depending on the thickness of the stone, plan to dig down about 6-8”. For easy removal, dump the soil into a wheelbarrow. 4. Use a compactor to get the base as solid as possible. These can be rented at most home centers. A hand tamper would also work, but multiple steps in this process will require compacting, so it’s worth it to rent the compactor. Use hearing protection while running the compactor. 5. Once the walkway is packed down, add two inches or so of stone pack and compact that as well. 6. Add a couple more inches of stone pack on top of that and compact it. 7. Mix up the stone dust in the wheelbarrow with water. 8. Scoop the stone dust mixture onto the walkway in small sections at a time. Smooth it out with a trowel. 9. Place the stepping stones in a logical order on top of the stone dust. Wiggle the stones as low as possible to ensure the stone dust fills in the gaps underneath the stone as well. A rubber mallet and a level should be used to make sure the stones are placed evenly. 10. Continue this process all the way across the walkway. If a stone feels like a close fit but isn’t quite right, try cutting it with the back end of a masonry hammer. 11. Secure plastic edging around both sides of the walkway. They come with stakes that can be hammered easily into the ground. Resources: Because natural stone is a naturally-occurring substance, it will not always be possible to match other natural stone in a landscape. Mark suggests identifying the nearest stone and masonry yards first to see if they have what you’re looking for. The natural stone stepper Mark used is called a “New York Paver”, which he got from Cavicchio Greenhouses (https://ift.tt/1lWl8Sh ). The plastic edging is Vigoro No-Dig Landscape Edging Kit, and is found at most home centers. The compacter Mark used can be rented from most home centers. The other materials Mark used for this job, including the mallet and edging can also be found at the home center. Expert assistance with this segment was provided by MJM Masonry (http://mjmmasonry.com/ ). Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, ask this old house, mark mccullough, kevin o'connor, concrete, masonry Watch the full episode, Stone Walkway, Rustic Headboard | Ask TOH: https://ift.tt/2ysoda8 Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

Friday 19 October 2018

Future House Extras | Space Bathroom


In this web exclusive extra, Ask This Old House home technology expert Ross Trethewey travels to NASA Johnson Space Center to meet with Mike Berrill and see how astronauts use the bathroom in space Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Resources: Expert assistance with this segment was provided by NASA Johnson Space Center (https://ift.tt/1E37e6z). Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, ask this old house, future house, ross trethewey, space station, NASA, plumbing Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2yj8g65 Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

Future House Extras | How An Astronaut Lives in Space


In this web exclusive extra, Ask This Old House home technology expert Ross Trethewey travels to NASA Johnson Space Center to meet with Tom Marshburn and hear about his experience living aboard the International Space Station Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Resources: Expert assistance with this segment was provided by NASA Johnson Space Center (https://ift.tt/1E37e6z). Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, ask this old house, future house, ross trethewey, space station, NASA Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2yj8g65 Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

Future House Extras | Testing How People Can Live in Space


In this web exclusive extra, Ask This Old House home technology expert Ross Trethewey travels to NASA Johnson Space Center to meet with Lisa Spence, a researcher that tests the psychological and physiological effects of space travel on humans in ground-based simulators Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Resources: Expert assistance with this segment was provided by NASA Johnson Space Center (https://ift.tt/1E37e6z). Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, ask this old house, future house, ross trethewey, space station, NASA Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2yj8g65 Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

Future House Extras | Space Kitchen


In this web exclusive extra, Ask This Old House home technology expert Ross Trethewey travels to NASA Johnson Space Center to meet with Vickie Kloeris to sample the food and beverages that astronauts eat while on board the International Space Station Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Resources: Expert assistance with this segment was provided by NASA Johnson Space Center (https://ift.tt/1E37e6z). Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, ask this old house, future house, ross trethewey, space station, NASA, kitchen Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2yj8g65 Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

Future House Extras | Space Gym


In this web exclusive extra, Ask This Old House home technology expert Ross Trethewey travels to NASA Johnson Space Center to meet with Bob Tweedy to see the exercise regimen that astronauts use in space and the machinery that keeps them fit without gravity Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Resources: Expert assistance with this segment was provided by NASA Johnson Space Center (https://ift.tt/1E37e6z). Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, ask this old house, future house, ross trethewey, space station, NASA, gym Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2yj8g65 Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

Health Conditions Helped by Fasting | Fasting & Cleanses


Whether you’re trying to lose weight, improve your health or get more energy, here’s some resources for your Detox: Optimum Colon: 14 Days Quick Cleanse to Support Detox: http://amzn.to/1Rue0vj Nature's Secret 5-Day Fast and Cleanse Kit : http://amzn.to/1FXo12E 10-Day Green Smoothie Cleanse: http://amzn.to/1L723aA Weight loss with Intermittent Fasting: Detox and Clean Your Body: http://amzn.to/1j9dWWb The Reboot with Joe Juice Diet: Lose Weight, Get Healthy: http://amzn.to/1jdGfTQ Watch more How to Detox videos: https://ift.tt/2AiTjlU Hi. I'm Natalia Rose, and today we're going to talk about the health conditions that could be helped with fasting. If you undertake fasting in an intelligent way, which I believe means to couple fasting with colonics and added meds. And when I say fasting, I mean juice fasting. Not water fasting, or dry fasting. You can definitely improve your state of health, and alleviate or relieve, improve chronic conditions and acute conditions that you may be suffering from. One of the major conditions that people see relief from through fasting, smart and intelligent fasting, is our skin conditions. Our skin conditions like, eczema, psoriasis, acne, pimples in general, poor skin quality. That's one of the immediate things that you'll see, when you undertake an intelligent fast. Internally your system is going to have this wonderful rest, when you're not consuming concentrated and dense food. In that period, while your body is resting, so many of your organs are going to get the chance to regenerate. Your organs are going to get to breathe, and take in more oxygen, receive more nutrients from the vegetable juice that you're already consuming, without having to breakdown all the dense substances, that you would otherwise be consuming, and you literally get a chance to regenerate the body at large. So you can expect to see improvement throughout your body.

Wednesday 17 October 2018

Future House | Living on the Space Station


Ask This Old House home technology expert Ross Trethewey travels to NASA Johnson Space Center to learn about the technology they use on the International Space Station to keep the astronauts alive Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Steps: 1. The International Space Station uses an interconnected system to preserve resources on board, called the Environmental Control and Life Support System (ECLSS). 2. Part of ECLSS is the Water Processor Assembly (WPA). That system is responsible for scavenging water from different resources (breath, urine, etc.) and distilling it until it is potable again. 3. Another part of ECLSS involves oxygen generation. They have a tank that collects some of the water from the WPA and electrolyzes it, which can split it into hydrogen and oxygen. The oxygen gets pumped back into the Space Station and the hydrogen and carbon dioxide from the astronauts are vented outside. 4. Since a lot of the equipment on the International Space Station generate heat, they actually need to keep the station cool. They have lines of ammonia running on the outside of the station that transfer to water/glycol lines on the inside of the station. Vents on the top and bottom of the station circulate the air across the lines and keep the station cool. Resources: Ross visited NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston, TX. Expert assistance with this segment was provided by Scott Tingle, Captain Mike Foreman and NASA Johnson Space Center (https://ift.tt/1E37e6z). Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, ask this old house, future house, ross trethewey, space station, technology, NASA Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2yj8g65 Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

How to Say "I Don't Understand" in Greek | Greek Lessons


Like these Greek Lessons !!! Check out the official app http://apple.co/1NeqM2W Χαίρετε, Looking to learn Greek? Lonely Planet Greek Phrasebook & Dictionary Paperback: http://amzn.to/1VEs1fM Get Your Greek On!: Basic Greek in Two Weeks: http://amzn.to/1MeWd70 Learn Greek - Word Power 101 Kindle Edition: http://amzn.to/1GwEOEL The Ultimate Greek Phrasebook: http://amzn.to/1Om9UWf Read and Speak Greek for Beginners: http://amzn.to/1L72qSy Watch more How to Speak Greek videos: https://ift.tt/2yLSkJ5 How to say, I don't understand in Greek. I don't understand. Then ka-ta-la-ve-no. I don't understand. Then ka-ta-la-ve-no. Now, you try. You can also say, I don't get it. Then to e-pia-sa. I don't get it. Then to e-pia-sa. Now,you try. You can also say, I'm confused. E-xo bear-de-ftee. I'm confused. E-xo bear-de-ftee. Now, you try. You can also say, bear-de-ftee-ka. I'm confused. Bear-de-ftee-ka. Now, you try. And that's how to say, I don't understand in Greek.

Tuesday 16 October 2018

TOH: Trade School- Exclusive Preview of Modernizing a Balloon Frame!


With the interior opened up, master carpenter Norm Abram shows host Kevin O'Connor the bones of the building, and the unique features of a balloon framed house—studs that run from sill plate to top plate, with floors that hang from that structure. On the first floor, general contractor Tom Silva needs to relocate a load bearing partition wall and take the dip out of the floor. He uses temporary supports, makes up a carrying beam, inserts the new structure, and then removes the old wall. Out front, Kevin and homeowner Sally Peterson meet Susan Maycock from the Cambridge Historic Commission to learn about appropriate colors for the outside of her Victorian-era house, and how many homeowners get it wrong by using too many colors in the wrong places. Tom continues to frame in the basement, but this time without wood—he's using new tongue and groove foam panels with embedded plastic studs and wiring chases. Kind of like a partial ICF, he installs them against the fieldstone foundation with a foam construction adhesive. Master electrician Allen Gallant shows Kevin how he's upgrading and relocating the electrical service on the house.

Monday 15 October 2018

How to Replace a Broken Window Pane


Ask This Old House general contractor Tom Silva replaces a broken pane in a basement window Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Time: 2 hours Cost: $30 Skill Level: Beginner Tools List for Replacing a Broken Window Pane: Utility knife HEPA vacuum Measuring tape Framing square Caulking gun Putty knife Shopping List: Gloves Safety glasses P100 Mask Single pane glass Glass cutting kit Latex glazing putty Glazing points Steps: 1. Remove the window from the frame. 2. Cut the glazing around the broken window pane using a utility knife. Wear gloves, safety glasses, and a mask to protect yourself from the glass and the potential for lead in the window. Hold a HEPA vacuum up to the window while you scrape out the glazing to keep the dust down. 3. Once the glazing has been cut, carefully pry the old glass pane from the frame. 4. Measure the opening for the window pane and transfer those measurements to the new glass. With a wood frame, shave 1/16” off the measurement to allow for expansion and contraction of the wood. 5. Dip the glass cutter in the oil that comes with the kit and then score the glass along the measured line. Use a framing square or another straight edge to line up the measurements on the glass. Only score it once. 6. Hold the glass over the edge of the work surface, lift it up, and then snap the glass down on the edge of the surface. The glass should cut cleanly. 7. Load the glazing putty in the caulking gun. Apply the glazing to the window opening. 8. Gently place the cut glass into the frame on top of the window glazing. 9. Slide multiple glazing points into the frame on top of the glass. A putty knife should help get them into the perfect position. 10. Apply a second bead of glazing putty on top of the window into frame. Smooth out the lines with a putty knife. 11. The glazing will take a couple of days to fully dry, but the window can be placed back in the opening while it does. 12. Once it fully dries, take a razor blade and clean up the edges of the glazing. Resources: Tom demonstrated how to replace the pane of a single pane, basement window. His technique will only work with that type of window. For double and triple pane windows, the whole unit will need to be replaced. The materials Tom used for this project, including the window glazing, glazing points, replacement glass, and glass cutters, are all available at home centers. Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, tom silva, ask this old house, window, pane, repair, replace Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2yj8g65 Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

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Weaponizing Tide Pods and Other Unique Laundry Solutions | Upcycle


Most of our content has a pretty strict rules we try to follow, but for a break we thought we’d experiment with a looser format and have a little fun while trying to repurpose and reuse old supplies and items that are left lying around, so enjoy this first episode in a new subseries we’re calling “Upcycle”, which at least this time features a fair amount of inept “DI-Why?” || In This Video || Our Camera Gear: - GH4: https://goo.gl/Kpgf9D - FS5: https://goo.gl/aPd428 - Dracast Light Panels: https://goo.gl/agbBSU - GoPro Hero 5: https://goo.gl/nDbjBk - Karma Drone: https://goo.gl/F16GWj || SUBSCRIBE || YouTube Channel: http://bit.ly/1OmesgS || SUPPORT || Patreon - https://ift.tt/1RzRaSL Spreadshirt - https://ift.tt/1OX2KHI Special Thanks to our Patrons at $15 per month or higher: Sandy Riis, Stian Andreassen, Daniel Laux, Winfield Jones, Liz Roth, Antonio Rios-Ochoa, Jenny Wolf-Matte, Quintin, Tim Reiche, Dylan Rich, Jason Lewis, Susan M. George, Lana Sinapayen, Stephen C Strausbaugh, Meinhard Absalon, Jason Kaczmarsky, Avinash Rajaraman, Andrew Nichols, Patrick Davis, Tyler Greeson, Remi_Scarlet, Skylar MacDonald, Steven Ingles, Brett Moran || SOCIAL || Facebook: http://ow.ly/X4rJC Twitter: http://ow.ly/X4rS3 (@HTMeverything) Instagram: http://ow.ly/X4rXs || SERIES || Sandwich - http://bit.ly/1ZVGNRn Suit - http://bit.ly/1NsQri8 Bottle - http://bit.ly/1QlTU6C Thanksgiving Dinner - http://bit.ly/1UjLa1R Root Beer Float - http://bit.ly/1OGfphU Book - http://bit.ly/1SF23Gx Chocolate Bar - http://bit.ly/2085HIs Coffee - http://bit.ly/2jllv0I Eyeglasses - http://bit.ly/2jlispn Microscope and Telescope: http://bit.ly/2nQCRn7 How To Brew Everything: http://bit.ly/2kJb47E Meet The Makers - http://bit.ly/23ldFlS || ABOUT || Today, getting what you need is as easy as a trip to the store. From food to clothing, energy, medicine, and so much more, Andy George will discover what it takes to make everything from scratch. His mission is to understand the complex processes of manufacturing that is often taken for granted and do it all himself. Each week he’s traveling the world to bypass the modern supply chain in order to harvest raw materials straight from the source. Along the way, he’s answering the questions you never thought to ask. Music by the talented Taylor Lewin http://taylorlewin.com

Gordon Ramsay Demonstrates How To Prepare Citrus & Champagne Sabayon | The F Word


Simple and delicious. Add The F Word on Facebook: https://ift.tt/1KOqboh... To find out more about Gordon Ramsay visit: https://ift.tt/MNlxUn Gordon Ramsay on Facebook https://ift.tt/JnOoCj Follow Gordon Ramsay on Twitter

Sunday 14 October 2018

How to Make Your Own Concrete


Ask This Old House mason Mark McCullough explains the basics of making concrete Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Time: 10 minutes Cost: $20 Skill Level: Beginner Tools List for Making Concrete: Trowel Mixing bucket Bucket for measuring Shopping List: Sand in bulk Aggregate in bulk (crushed stone, etc.) Portland cement in bulk Steps: 1. Measure out each ingredient in the following proportion: 3 parts sand, 2 parts aggregate, 1 part Portland cement. Use a bucket to help keep the measurements accurate. 2. Pour the sand, aggregate, and Portland cement into a mixing bucket. To make the mix stronger, add more aggregate and Portland cement. 3. Add water slowly to the bucket and begin to mix it up with the trowel. Add more water as needed until the concrete is at the correct consistency. Resources: Most concrete can be made using a premixed bag, like the one Mark demonstrated, which is manufactured by Quikrete (https://ift.tt/2boMkKO). For bigger jobs that require a lot of concrete, it’s cheaper to make the concrete yourself. The sand, aggregate, and Portland cement can all be found at masonry yards. Expert assistance with this segment was provided by MJM Masonry (http://mjmmasonry.com/). Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, ask this old house, mark mccullough, kevin o'connor, concrete, masonry Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2yj8g65 Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

Friday 12 October 2018

Best Uses for an Electric Tankless Water Heater


Ask This Old House plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey discusses which houses are the best fit for an electric tankless water heater Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Resources: Expert assistance with this segment was provided by Bosch Thermotechnology (https://ift.tt/20VXDLl). Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, ask this old house, richard trethewey, kevin o'connor, plumbing, heating, tankless, water heater Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2zWP1kj Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

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Wednesday 10 October 2018

How to Maximize the Impact of Insulation


Ask This Old House general contractor Tom Silva gives some basic tips about insulating an attic Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Cost: $100 and Up Skill Level: Beginner Tools: Insulation blower Shopping List: Unfaced fiberglass insulation OR Cellulose insulation OR Rigid foam insulation ¼” plywood Steps: 1. An easy way to improve the insulation in a home is by insulating the attic floor. 2. Fiberglass insulation can be unrolled and placed into floor joists. Be sure to install unfaced insulation. Faced insulation has a vapor barrier that can hold on to moisture and cause mold in the attic floor and the ceiling below. 3. It’s possible to rent an insulation blower and buy cellulose insulation to blow into the floor joists. In this case, blow the insulation so that it falls higher than the floor joists to allow for settlement. 4. If the attic floor is covered, add a layer of rigid foam and then add ¼” plywood on top of that. Resources: Tom demonstrated a variety of different insulation types that can be used in an attic. The fiberglass insulation Tom showed is manufactured by Owens Corning (https://ift.tt/2cZfmDw) . It comes in a variety of different R-values depending on where you are in the country and how much insulation you need, and it can come either faced or unfaced. Tom recommends getting unfaced insulation, but if it’s only available faced, the label can be peeled off and used. Tom also discusses using cellulose insulation or using rigid foam insulation over floor boards to allow for storage and added insulation in an attic. All of these can be found at a home center. Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, tom silva, ask this old house, kevin o'connor, insulation Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2zWP1kj Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

How to Make Dough Rise Faster | Make Bread


Watch more How to Make Bread videos: https://ift.tt/2QHc5sz Okay, so I would like for my dough to start proofing and rising faster. So a couple of tricks that I use. The first thing is that I like to use the residual heat from the oven and if the oven is preheating, you need to be really careful that you don't get your bread too warm, but heat and warmth helps the dough proof faster, and so what I do is I find a spot close to the oven, that isn't directly on the oven. For example, I want my loaf of sandwich dough to proof faster, so I'm going to move it as close to the oven as I can, without it actually being on top, and it just gets that little bit of extra warmth and it helps it proof faster. That's not quite on the oven. The second thing that I like to do to help dough proof faster is dough proofs faster when it's in a moist environment, and so if you are making bread at home and it seems like the dough is getting a skin on it, and it seems dry you need to try to provide a little bit of moisture to that dough. My favorite trick is to dampen a kitchen towel, and place it over the proofing bread, and that moisture will help the dough to proof faster. So those are just a couple of tricks to help your dough proof faster.

Monday 8 October 2018

How to Install a Plunge Pool


Ask This Old House landscape designer Jenn Nawada installs a plunge pool for a homeowner with a small backyard Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Time: 4-6 weeks Cost: $20,000 and Up Skill Level: Expert Shopping List: Plunge Pool Steps: 1. This is a custom and professional job that will require working with a pool manufacturer and an excavator. 2. Order the pool with the desired dimensions, type of tiles, and seat placement. It can take up to a month for the order to be fulfilled and delivered. 3. An excavator should come and dig the hole for the pool, just slightly longer and wider than the actual dimensions of the pool. 4. The excavator should also pour about 18” of crushed stone into the hole and compact everything. 5. When the hole is prepped, a truck will deliver the pool and crane it into place. 6. Once the pool is in place, the pool equipment will need to be put into place and plumbed in. 7. The landscaping and hardscaping around the pool can then be completed after that to give the plunge pool a nice, finished look. Resources: Jenn installed a custom plunge pool, manufactured by Soake Pools (https://ift.tt/2y7kLBI). The company sources all the materials required for the pool, including the pool equipment. Expert assistance with this segment was provided by Phoenix Precast Products (https://ift.tt/2PmHyQG). Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, Jenn Nawada, plunge pool, swimming pools, yard, landscaping, ask this old house Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2zWP1kj Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

Curly Hair Do's & Don'ts | Salon Hair Tutorial


Step up your Hair Game with these Salon Quality products: Vidal Sassoon Styling Combs: http://amzn.to/1GwCopE Softhood Bonnet Hair Dryer Attachment: http://amzn.to/1QZSVYP Remington Salon Collection Ceramic Hair Straightener: http://amzn.to/1jOw200 Salon Straightener V Shape Comb: http://amzn.to/1JTb8Ss Revlon Tourmaline Ionic Ceramic Dryer: http://amzn.to/1N0oP6N Watch more Beautiful Easy Hairstyles videos: https://ift.tt/2NxJXq9 [Music] Hi everybody. My name's Dhiran Mistry and I work for John Barrett Salon in Bergdorf Goodman. Today I'm with Cassie and we're going to talk about the dos and don't s with curly hair. As you can see Cassie has a great, great head of curly hair, but in order to keep them we don't want to play with them to much. A massive don't would be not to play with them, not to brush them, and not to comb them. When your hair is wet you want to be able to keep and maintain as much curl and definition in the hair. I recommend putting in some really good conditioner or some curl creme and leave it in. If you want to speed up the dry process, than you can use a diffuser, that will help enhance the curl and dry it a lot quicker than leaving it to dry naturally. When you sleep, that's another time when hair can get really messed, so first major, major tip to help, by using silk pillowcase. A silk pillowcase will be less abrasive for the curls, and it sounds quite disgusting, but it will absorb more of the sweat. Another thing you'll want to do, while you're sleeping, is maybe turn your hair upside down and tie it up in a way that it doesn't mess up the curls to much. What I'm going to do is flip Cassie's head over and just grab the hair into a loose ponytail, and just twist it like so, grab a pin like this, and just drop the pin in. This way when you sleep the only thing that is going to be touching the pillow will be the underneath parts of your hair. This will stop it from getting to, to frizzy. This is a really effective way of keeping the curl. The other thing you shouldn't be doing everyday is shampooing it. Its generally, depending on your hair type . . . If your hair type is really, really fine then grease is going to become visible on the roots, so you really want to wash it every three, four, or five days at the most. The best thing to do is while you're taking a shower or washing is to wet it down and put some conditioner through it, but you do not need to shampoo it. Because, shampooing will clean it out, take all the essential oils out, and ruin all of the definition that you have. [Music]

Gordon Amazed By Chef Who Overcooks PEAS | The F Word


Just by looking at it. Add The F Word on Facebook: https://ift.tt/1KOqboh... To find out more about Gordon Ramsay visit: https://ift.tt/MNlxUn Gordon Ramsay on Facebook https://ift.tt/JnOoCj Follow Gordon Ramsay on Twitter

TOH: Trade School- Exclusive Preview of Deconstruction and Design!


Deconstruction continues on the 1887 two-family home. Arborist Jack Kelly removes the sick Norway maple that, left untouched, would come down on its own one day soon. The architects show Kevin the plan via a 3-D computer model, then they visit a house down the street with homeowner Sally Peter-son to see the design ideas that first caught Sally's eye.

Sunday 7 October 2018

How to Install an Electric Heat Pump Water Heater


Ask This Old House plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey travels to Celebration, Florida to help a homeowner select and install the right electric water heater Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Time: 3-4 hours Cost: $1000 Skill Level: Moderate Tools List for Installing an Electric Heat Pump: Hose Pipe cutters Shopping List: Electric heat pump water heater Pipe and fittings to match existing water pipes Correct adhesives for existing pipes (PVC glue, solder and flux, etc.) Vacuum valve T&P valve Steps: 1. Shut the power off to the electric water heater and shut off the main water supply to the house. 2. Connect a hose to the bottom of the tank and run the hose to outside. Drain the old water heater. 3. Use the pipe cutters to cut the pipes to the water heater and remove it. 4. Put the new heat pump water heater into place. 5. Connect the new water heater to the main water supply using the appropriate size and type of pipes to match the existing water line. 6. Install a vacuum valve near the top of the water heater to prevent the water heater from collapsing in on itself in case it is turned off. 7. Be sure that the water heater has a T&P valve and that it is correctly installed. 8. Some installations may require an expansion valve or expansion tank. 9. Turn the water and the electricity back on. Resources: Richard installed the Voltex Hybrid Electric Heat Pump water heater, manufactured by AO Smith (https://ift.tt/2rPKjhe) to save electricity over a conventional tank style water heater. The other materials used for this project, including PVC piping, PVC glue, pipe cutters, and wrenches can all be found at home centers. In the workshop, Richard discusses which homeowners should consider a whole-house electric tankless. Expert assistance with this portion was provided by Bosch Thermotechnology (https://ift.tt/20VXDLl). Expert assistance with this segment was provided by Jim’s Plumbing and Irrigation of Orlando, Florida. Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, ask this old house, richard trethewey, plumbing, heat pump, water heater Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2zWP1kj Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

Touring Celebration, Florida


Ask This Old House plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey visits Celebration, Florida, a planned community south of Orlando that was built using the principles of New Urbanism Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse He checks out the house styles, the commercial Town Center, and even talks with a homeowner about what made him choose to live here. Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, ask this old house, richard trethewey, Celebration FL Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2zWP1kj Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH