Wednesday 31 March 2021

Introducing | Modern Barnhouse Ep 1 | This Old House


In episode 1: Owner/Designer Amy Matthews, Architect Colin Oglesbay, and Builder Chad Maack tour the property for the latest Idea House, and share their vision about the design and build of Amy’s stunning 2021 Modern Scandinavian Barnhouse. #ThisOldHouse #AskTOH SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse About This Old House TV: This Old House is the No. 1 multimedia home enthusiast brand, offering trusted information and expert advice through award-winning television, a highly regarded magazine, and an information-driven website. This Old House and Ask This Old House are produced by This Old House Ventures, LLC and are presented on PBS by WNET. Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter http://bit.ly/AskTOHTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG Tumblr: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTumblr Introducing | Modern Barnhouse Ep 1 | This Old House https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Tuesday 30 March 2021

This Old House | Decking for Beginners (S41 E5) | FULL EPISODE


Tommy teaches the new apprentices to frame a deck. Jeff’s crew frames the exterior flair detail. Jenn learns about Westerly granite. Jeff teaches the apprentices to install a window. Richard and Jeff look for a path for the drain stacks. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. Kevin arrives to the house to find Tommy outside teaching the apprentices how to set posts and beams to frame for a new deck. On the exterior, where the first floor meets the second floor, is a flared edge detail that runs all the way around the house. Jeff shows Kevin how his crew will use 150 precut rafter tails made of laminated finger-jointed lumber to frame the flare or "sweep". The homeowners meet with Jenn to talk about hardscape around the property. Steps and walkways will be needed to access the home. Jenn discovers that Westerly was at one point an important supplier of granite to the entire country. These days Westerly granite is harder to come by, as few quarries and stone cutters remain. There is a day in every This Old House apprentices' life when they learn to install a window. Kevin finds Jeff at the head of the class with Kathryn, De'Shaun, and Ryan soaking up the knowledge. Once the window is in, Jeff shows them how to make sure it's square. With stud walls in, rough plumbing has begun. Richard works with plumber Josh as well as Jeff to find a solution for a drain from an upstairs toilet that's located right above a structural double joist. Enjoying full-episodes of This Old House? Join This Old House INSIDER to stream every episode ever made of This Old House (over 1,000 hours), commercial-free. https://bit.ly/32CLaGe Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N Products and Services from this episode Cast and Crew Lodging Category: Side Trip, Miscellaneous Side Trip The Margin Street Inn https://ift.tt/3bZPggh Coastal Forest Products https://ift.tt/3u7Rwtg Category: Building Resources, Materials Supplier Coastal Forest Products https://ift.tt/3u7Rwtg Granite Quarry Category: Contractors & Services, Building Resources, Materials, Hardscaping Supplier Comolli Granite https://ift.tt/3u08vxw Granite Quarry Category: Side Trip Side Trip Rawson Materials https://ift.tt/3dpr5bP J N Jordan Plumbing Category: Contractors & Services, Plumbing Contractor J N Jordan (401) 213-6635 Lamco https://ift.tt/3u08w4y Category: Building Resources, Materials Manufacturer Lamco https://ift.tt/3u08w4y Roof rafter tails Category: Contractors & Services Contractor Dwyer Hardwoods https://ift.tt/3u5t8s8 Weather membrane Category: Building Resources, Siding, Materials Supplier GCP Applied Technologies (Formerly Grace Residential Building Materials) https://gcpat.com/en About This Old House TV: This Old House is America’s first and most trusted home improvement show. Each season, we renovate two different historic homes—one step at a time—featuring quality craftsmanship and the latest in modern technology. We demystify home improvement and provide ideas and information so, whether you are doing it yourself or hiring out contractors, you’ll know the right way to do things or the questions to ask. Our experts including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor give you the tools you need to protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG This Old House | Decking for Beginners (S41 E5) | FULL EPISODE https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Monday 29 March 2021

Norm Tours First Period Houses | This Old House


Norm Abram tours First Period homes local to the North Shore area. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. Norm Abram tours 17th Century houses local to the North Shore area with housewright Matt Diana. Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House Insider to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: https://bit.ly/2GPiYbH Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N About This Old House TV: This Old House is America’s first and most trusted home improvement show. Each season, we renovate two different historic homes—one step at a time—featuring quality craftsmanship and the latest in modern technology. We demystify home improvement and provide ideas and information so, whether you are doing it yourself or hiring out contractors, you’ll know the right way to do things or the questions to ask. Our experts including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor give you the tools you need to protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG Norm Tours First Period Houses | This Old House https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Is Monogamy Unrealistic? | Jealousy & Affairs


Jealousy and Infidelity can ruin any relationship, Learn what you can do: After the Affair: Healing the Pain and Rebuilding Trust: http://amzn.to/1jdFZnV Not "Just Friends": Rebuilding Trust and Recovering Your Sanity: http://amzn.to/1No16QX Transcending Post-infidelity Stress Disorder: http://amzn.to/1No1bEd How to Not Be Jealous: Deal With, Overcome and Stop Jealousy: http://amzn.to/1Q8qaZM Jungle Of Jealousy:How To Deal With Jealously: http://amzn.to/1jOyUu1 Watch more How to Deal with Jealousy & Infidelity videos: https://ift.tt/3fqCsT9 Problem with monogamy is that it goes against human nature. From evolutionary perspective, our ancestors gained a lot by cheating. They passed on more and diverse genes into future generations. So part of us are those evolutionary program breeds that lead us to want to cheat. The other problem is that we're living a lot longer than before. So now a couple that gets married at 20 is expected to be monogamous for 60 years. That's a long time to be with one partner. It is simply put like that. If you're told that no matter how like, much you like a particular restaurant that you must eat at this restaurant everyday for the rest of your life, I think you 're gonna wonder what it's like to eat somewhere else. So obviously monogamy puts a very heavy burden on a couple and therefore, it is important for a couple to continually negotiate the terms of monogamy. I think there is nothing wrong to renegotiate these terms from time to time. Perhaps to allow for some transgressions, perhaps allowing for talking to someone on the internet or watching pornography or sexting whatever it is that makes that partner comfortable and it's something that each couple needs to renegotiate every decade or so.

Gordon Ramsay Teaches McFly How To Make A Beef Salad | The F Word


Gordon Ramsay has Mcfly in the F Word resteraunt! _____________________________________________ #TheFWord #GordonRamsay #Food #Cooking 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 March 2021

Touring a First Period Home | This Old House


Kevin O’Connor tours a restored 17th Century house. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. Kevin O’Connor visits a reproduction First Period home a few miles away form the North Shore project to find out how houses were roofed 400 years ago. Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House Insider to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: https://bit.ly/2GPiYbH Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N About This Old House TV: This Old House is America’s first and most trusted home improvement show. Each season, we renovate two different historic homes—one step at a time—featuring quality craftsmanship and the latest in modern technology. We demystify home improvement and provide ideas and information so, whether you are doing it yourself or hiring out contractors, you’ll know the right way to do things or the questions to ask. Our experts including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor give you the tools you need to protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG Touring a First Period Home | This Old House https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Saturday 27 March 2021

How Reproduction Light Fixtures are Handcrafted | This Old House


Kevin O’Connor travels to Vermont to see reproduction light fixtures handcrafted. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. Kevin O’Connor visits a reproduction First Period home a few miles away form the North Shore project to find out how houses were roofed 400 years ago. Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House Insider to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: https://bit.ly/2GPiYbH Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N About This Old House TV: This Old House is America’s first and most trusted home improvement show. Each season, we renovate two different historic homes—one step at a time—featuring quality craftsmanship and the latest in modern technology. We demystify home improvement and provide ideas and information so, whether you are doing it yourself or hiring out contractors, you’ll know the right way to do things or the questions to ask. Our experts including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor give you the tools you need to protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG How Reproduction Light Fixtures are Handcrafted | This Old House https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Friday 26 March 2021

How to Drill for Geothermal Energy | This Old House


Richard Trethewey discusses geothermal energy at the North Shore site as drilling begins. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. Richard Trethewey is on hand to see the drilling begin for a geothermal system that will reduce the North Shore homeowners’ energy bill by almost 50-percent. Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House Insider to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: https://bit.ly/2GPiYbH Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N About This Old House TV: This Old House is America’s first and most trusted home improvement show. Each season, we renovate two different historic homes—one step at a time—featuring quality craftsmanship and the latest in modern technology. We demystify home improvement and provide ideas and information so, whether you are doing it yourself or hiring out contractors, you’ll know the right way to do things or the questions to ask. Our experts including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor give you the tools you need to protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG How to Drill for Geothermal Energy | This Old House https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Confronting the Other Woman or Man | Jealousy & Affairs


Jealousy and Infidelity can ruin any relationship, Learn what you can do: After the Affair: Healing the Pain and Rebuilding Trust: http://amzn.to/1jdFZnV Not "Just Friends": Rebuilding Trust and Recovering Your Sanity: http://amzn.to/1No16QX Transcending Post-infidelity Stress Disorder: http://amzn.to/1No1bEd How to Not Be Jealous: Deal With, Overcome and Stop Jealousy: http://amzn.to/1Q8qaZM Jungle Of Jealousy:How To Deal With Jealously: http://amzn.to/1jOyUu1 Watch more How to Deal with Jealousy & Infidelity videos: https://ift.tt/3w0jrwR I generally do not recommend to my patients that they seek out and confront the other man or woman that their partner is engaged with. And there are multiple reasons for this. One, main one, is their safety. We don't know how people are going to react. You never know whether this person is going to engage in violent, erratic behavior. You don't know yourself if you would lose control. You don't know what feelings meeting that person would evoke in you and whether you are clearly capable of impulse control when you're flooded with those feelings. So your safety is the main reason why I recommend against confronting that person, however, there are certain exceptions. One is that if you believe that unless you confront this person, this person will continue to initiate contact with your partner then I think it's important to confront. I think it's also important to confront if this is someone you know and you have a chance of running into as well because that could cause all sorts of otherwise uncomfortable situations as well. I think it's better to get things out in the open, however, you have to be very careful when you confront. I usually ask this person to make sure they're very calm when they do that and to enlist a friend that they can either go with or talk to at the same time so that you don't feel overwhelmed and alone. But again, it's a complicated issue. A lot of people hope to confront the other man or woman in order to get some kind of details or to get the truth and you're never going to get the truth. They only heard a different side of this. A whole different story. A lot of time they will lie. They will say things that will make you angry or so chances of you getting some sort of closure or some sort of remorse or expecting them to apologize this is all kind of a set up for more hurt and more negative emotions. So I don't generally recommend it unless you feel that you absolutely must confront or you, you just keep ruminating and you cannot go on. And so it's a, it's an important thing to weigh your safety versus the real importance of confronting the other man or woman.

Thursday 25 March 2021

ASK This Old House | Ductless Humidifier, Planters (S18 E4) FULL EPISODE


Tom explains the uses and purposes of different types of screws; Richard travels to Park City, Utah to install a whole house ductless humidifier; Ross and Richard discuss changes to electric bill payment structures; Jenn installs a front entry planter for a homeowner that will last through the winter. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. How to Install a Whole-House Ductless Humidifier Richard installed an Aprilaire 865 Whole House Steam Humidifier with a Wall Mount Fan for Homes without HVAC Duct System. The unit has a higher capacity to account for the vaulted ceilings in the homeowner's house despite the smaller square footage. The other tools and materials required for installation, including the copper tubing, drills, and wrenches can all be found at home centers. After the segment, Richard discussed a different kind of whole house steam humidifier, which is called an AcuSteam Steam Humidifier, which is manufactured by Thermolec. How to Decode Screws All the different screws Tom demonstrated can be found at home centers. The gauge Tom demonstrated to help determine the correct screw head size is called a bolt gauge and can be found at home centers as well. How to Install Winter-Proof Entry Planters Jenn planted two boxwoods and underplanted them with ivy. Both of these plants and the potting soil to plant them in can be found at home centers. Jenn reused the planters the homeowner already had, but planters similar to that can be found at the home center as well. To insulate the planter, Jenn cut squares of FOAMULAR 150 rigid foam board insulation, which is manufactured by Owens Corning. Jenn also used broken shards of old terra cotta pots to allow for more drainage at the bottom of the planter, which can be found at any nursery or home center. To protect the boxwoods during the winter, Jenn recommends spraying an anti-desiccant spray. The one she referenced in the workshop is Wilt Pruf. Enjoying full-episodes of This Old House? Join This Old House INSIDER to stream every episode ever made of This Old House (over 1,000 hours), commercial-free. https://bit.ly/32CLaGe Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N Products and Services from this episode Aprilaire https://ift.tt/1YSxJsq Category: HVAC, Plumbing Manufacturer Aprilaire https://ift.tt/1YSxJsq 865 Whole House Steam Humidifier Lee’s Heating and AC https://ift.tt/2JxkbTu Category: HVAC, Plumbing Expert assistance Lee’s Heating and AC https://ift.tt/2JxkbTu Owens Corning https://ift.tt/17mZTnK Category: Design, Furnishings, Landscaping Manufacturer Owens Corning https://ift.tt/17mZTnK FOAMULAR 150 rigid foam board insulation Thermolec https://ift.tt/2Jw8Ini Category: HVAC, Plumbing Manufacturer Thermolec https://ift.tt/2Jw8Ini AcuSteam Steam Humidifier Wilt Pruf Category: Design, Furnishings, Landscaping Manufacturer Wilt-Pruf Products, Inc. http://www.wiltpruf.com anti-desiccant spray About This Old House TV: This Old House is America’s first and most trusted home improvement show. Each season, we renovate two different historic homes—one step at a time—featuring quality craftsmanship and the latest in modern technology. We demystify home improvement and provide ideas and information so, whether you are doing it yourself or hiring out contractors, you’ll know the right way to do things or the questions to ask. Our experts including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor give you the tools you need to protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG [Video Title] https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Wednesday 24 March 2021

How to Explain the Toilet-Going Process | Potty Training


Potty Training Stinks! Here’s some products that may help: Summer Infant Lil' Loo Potty, White and Teal: http://amzn.to/1WNKbc3 Arm and Hammer Secure Comfort Potty Seat: http://amzn.to/1VEpkuG Potty (Leslie Patricelli board books) Board book: http://amzn.to/1FTEDbT Oh Crap! Potty Training: Everything Modern Parents Need to Know: http://amzn.to/1j9bBKD Potty Train in a Weekend: Mom of four shares the secrets: http://amzn.to/1Q8pio1 Watch more How to Potty Train Your Child videos: https://ift.tt/3vYI39p Let's talk about how to explain the toilet going process to your child. By this time your child may be going potty at home but not at school. Or your child may not be going potty when he's with his friends or with his grandparents. So you want to explain to your child what she needs to do when she's away from home and she needs to go potty. So remind her, when she needs to go potty, when she feels the edge to go potty, she needs to find an adult that can help her. She needs to go find a teacher, a grandma or her friend's mama and remind her what she needs to say. If you need to pee in the potty, tell grandma, "I need to go pee-pee" and then grandma will show you where the potty is, and show you how to use the potty whether be a small training potty or the regular toilet and she'll also have her rewards there for you. So when you do the pee in the potty, you'll get your reward. So be very clear as to what you expect of your child. When she feels the urge to go potty, tell her what she needs to say to an adult, and then what she needs to do when she gets into the bathroom and then what she needs to do to get her reward. Once she's successfully used the bathroom, then you can remind her to use the sink to wash her hands and the towel to dry her hands and then she can be finished. And that's how you explain the toilet going process.

Tuesday 23 March 2021

This Old House | Raise a Second Story (S41 E4) | FULL EPISODE


The gambrel roof profiles are pre-assembled and raised. Then the crew stands up the second floor walls. Three new apprentices arrive as part of the Gen Next program. Tommy shows them how to measure and cut roof rafters. Richard works with an engineer who is designing a septic system for the project. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. With the gables installed on both sides of the addition, Kevin O'Connor finds Tom Silva and Jeff Sweenor building and raising the narrow gambrel roof profiles on either end. The next step is to stand the two second floor dormer walls on the long sides of the house. With the windows framed out, Tom and Kevin throw in with Jeff and his crew to finish sheathing before they raise the walls. As part of the Generation Next initiative, each season apprentices are invited to join the building team so they can learn on the job. Kevin introduces the three newest apprentices, Kathryn Fulton, Ryan Dolan, and De'Shaun Burnett. Each come to the jobsite with a different background story and are ready to dive in with the crew. The original house had the most basic of waste water systems, a cesspool. The new construction means the homeowners must upgrade their system. Richard Trethewey meets with engineer Jeff Balch to find out the modern plan for waste water--including a biological system that significantly reduces the amount of nitrogen that's released to a leaching field. Meanwhile, heavy lifting continues as Jeff's team wraps up framing the second story and attic of the house. Kevin assists Jeff with installing the LVL ridge. Tom shows the three new apprentices how to measure and cut the roof rafters while the rest of the crew starts to install them. Enjoying full-episodes of This Old House? Join This Old House INSIDER to stream every episode ever made of This Old House (over 1,000 hours), commercial-free. https://bit.ly/32CLaGe Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N Apprenticeship program in New Orleans Category: Generation NEXT Contractor unCommon Construction https://ift.tt/3cfpbLx Cast and Crew Lodging Category: Side Trip, Miscellaneous Side Trip The Margin Street Inn https://ift.tt/3bZPggh Manufactured dimensional lumber Category: Building Resources, Materials, Side Trip Supplier Weyerhaeuser https://ift.tt/NI28s9 Septic Engineer Category: Contractors & Services Expert assistance Frisella-Balch Engineering (401) 783-5949 Weather membrane Category: Building Resources, Siding, Materials Supplier GCP Applied Technologies (Formerly Grace Residential Building Materials) https://gcpat.com/en About This Old House TV: This Old House is America’s first and most trusted home improvement show. Each season, we renovate two different historic homes—one step at a time—featuring quality craftsmanship and the latest in modern technology. We demystify home improvement and provide ideas and information so, whether you are doing it yourself or hiring out contractors, you’ll know the right way to do things or the questions to ask. Our experts including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor give you the tools you need to protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG This Old House | Raise a Second Story (S41 E4) | FULL EPISODE https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Setting Consequences for Rule Breaking | Classroom Management


Need more resources for molding young minds? THE Classroom Management Book: http://amzn.to/1FXoDpb Setting Limits in the Classroom: http://amzn.to/1Pj0iMN Classroom Management: Real-World, Time-Tested Techniques: http://amzn.to/1Q8s4JV The Social--Emotional Learning Approach Children Deserve: http://amzn.to/1L0l6p3 Classroom Management for Elementary Teachers: http://amzn.to/1FTGdKQ Watch more Classroom Management Strategies videos: https://ift.tt/3skGkc8 There are kind of two things out there for setting consequences for rule-breaking. A lot of schools use a very specific kind of step-by-step consequence guide for rule breaking. And it's mandated by the school or the district that you use it that way. For example, that might look like "give the student a warning, move the student's seat, call the student's parent, send the student out." That is one way to go about it, but it lacks flexibility. And because it lacks flexibility, it doesn't work in every situation, and it corners the teacher into having to figure out how to make that step system fit every student and every misbehavior. What I would recommend is coming up with a more tiered system. So for example, you might have three tiers. And on the first tier, this would be your mildest consequences. These would be things like proximity, moving closer to the student, looking at the student with the teacher stare. Saying the student's name along with the teacher stare,"Johnny." Things like that that are gentle, but might then get the student back on task would be on your first tier. The second tier would be things that are a little bit more involved and a little less mild. Things like moving the student's seat temporarily, or having a one-on-one conversation with them really quickly at their desk. Things like that might be on tier two. Tier three, then, might be your most severe consequences. Things like sending the student outside for a private conversation, or sending the student next door to a partner teacher for a time-out next door. And then you might actually have another tier that is referral to the office, or involving the parents and the counselors, and other things like that. But when we have multiple consequences on each of those tiers, we can be more flexible about how we choose our consequences for each individual student. Just like in a baseball game if you're the pitcher, you're not going to throw a curve-ball to every batter. If they can hit a curve, you're going to throw a fastball. Likewise, in the classroom, we have students who are misbehaving. The right consequence for each student might be different depending on who that student is, what makes them uncomfortable, and what you've used in the past with that student. So we can pick and choose from our different tiers. We might still move through a progression, though. From mild, to less mild, to a little bit more involved, to severe. It doesn't just have to be one thing on each of those steps. So that we can really meet each student where they need to be met to get the behavior that we want from them when they're breaking rules in the classroom.

Monday 22 March 2021

How to Install a Perimeter Drain | This Old House


Kevin O’Connor sees how Erik Kaminski installs a perimeter drain. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. Kevin O’Connor sees how Erik Kaminski installs the perimeter drain, which will keep groundwater away from the North Shore house. Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House Insider to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: https://bit.ly/2GPiYbH Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N About This Old House TV: This Old House is America’s first and most trusted home improvement show. Each season, we renovate two different historic homes—one step at a time—featuring quality craftsmanship and the latest in modern technology. We demystify home improvement and provide ideas and information so, whether you are doing it yourself or hiring out contractors, you’ll know the right way to do things or the questions to ask. Our experts including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor give you the tools you need to protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG How to Install a Perimeter Drain | This Old House https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Anger & Anxiety | Anger Management


Want to get a grip on your Anger? Check out these resources: Beyond Anger: How to Free Yourself from the Grip of Anger: http://amzn.to/1VFo0CA The Anger Workbook: http://amzn.to/1FXmxpi Anger Management For Dummies: http://amzn.to/1VFokRC The Cow in the Parking Lot: A Zen Approach to Overcoming Anger: http://amzn.to/1QZTMcb Anger Management for Everyone: Seven Proven Ways to Control Anger: http://amzn.to/1Om49ro Watch more Anger Management videos: https://ift.tt/2PiQN9u I want to talk to you a little bit about anger and anxiety but also the related concepts of fear and hostility. So if we look at the emotions of anger and fear, they're both considered to be by most theorists primary or basic emotions. So, one, they have high adaptive evolutionary value and they certainly develop very early in humans. Both of these are related to the fight or flight response. So when an animal or a human comes into contact with a potential threat or something that's dangerous, the sympathetic nervous system becomes very, very active. And so glucose is sent to the limbs so that the animal or the human can run or flee. That's flight and that's associated with the fear response. And those behaviors are typically avoidance or escape. Likewise, the anger response or the fight response, sympathetic nervous system is also very active and they both look fairly similar in terms of the physiological response. Certainly a lot of epinephrine, norepinephrine and glucocorticoids are being released at those times. And you might have heard epinephrine and norepinephrine called adrenaline or noradrenaline. But during those times people experience feeling like they have lots of energy, heart rate increases, and so people might talk about palpitations. It's the kind of thing you might experience if you're having a panic attack. You might be sweating more, your respiration increases, your pupils dilate. All these things that are really preparing us to deal with a potential physical threat. So anger and fear are oftentimes by theorists sort of described on tables or in models as sort of being opposites even though they similarly both prepare us to handle threats. But the behavioral action tendencies are seemingly opposite. So oftentimes anger, although not always the case, is associated with approach behaviors. If I become really angry and my nervous system is engaged where the sympathetic nervous system is active, I might engage or approach the potential threat. With fear, I might have my nervous system, my sympathetic nervous system, firing and I feel similarly in terms of my muscles and the amount of energy they have. But instead of approaching, I'm in fact going to withdraw or escape. So that's oftentimes why they're talked about sometimes as opposites. The related constructs of anxiety and hostility are related to both anger and fear but usually hostility would be something that’s considered an attitude. So it might have a lot of cognitive elements that might go along with anger, thinking about someone and saying, "oh what a jerk, he shouldn't have acted that way, I'm going to get this guy" and that kind of thing. But the physiological arousal would be much lower and oftentimes hostility might sort of permeate across situations as opposed to an intense anger emotion being a particular episode with a discreet beginning and an end with high levels of emotional intensity and physiological activation. Likewise, anxiety is typically concerned with worried thoughts and so these are all lot of cognitions, a lot of thoughts, that usually have a concept, something to do with "what if?" and uncertainty and they're focused on the future, about a potential threat that's coming in the future. And so again, there might be some activation but it's not necessarily a high level of fear all the time but rather a lot of cognitive elements that have to do with worries. Now anger and fear, these two emotions, can be highly adaptive, especially if they're really short even if it's very intense but it's short in duration that doesn't necessarily have a whole lot of bad health implications. But we know that hostility and anxiety in fact do have all kinds of negative predictive qualities for poor health outcomes. So hostility in fact predicts all kinds of poor outcomes from stroke to heart attack and sometimes is a better predictor than even cholesterol and blood pressure when we're talking about things like heart attacks. The good news is we can in fact decrease hostility levels with effective anger management strategies. So if anyone does have high levels of hostility, it's a very good idea to speak to your health care provider about getting effective treatment. Likewise,

Sunday 21 March 2021

Kevin and Tom Tour the House Factory | This Old House


Tom Silva and Kevin O’Connor kick the tires at the Vermont House Factory. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. Tom Silva and Kevin O’Connor visit the Vermont factory where the North Shore house will be built. Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House Insider to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: https://bit.ly/2GPiYbH Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N About This Old House TV: This Old House is America’s first and most trusted home improvement show. Each season, we renovate two different historic homes—one step at a time—featuring quality craftsmanship and the latest in modern technology. We demystify home improvement and provide ideas and information so, whether you are doing it yourself or hiring out contractors, you’ll know the right way to do things or the questions to ask. Our experts including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor give you the tools you need to protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG Kevin and Tom Tour the House Factory | This Old House https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Saturday 20 March 2021

How to Blast for a Foundation | This Old House


Richard Trethewey visits the North Shore property as blasting of the rock ledge begins. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. Richard Trethewey meets Ed Akerley, who drills and blasts through the rock ledge at North Shore to make room for the foundation. Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House Insider to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: https://bit.ly/2GPiYbH Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N About This Old House TV: This Old House is America’s first and most trusted home improvement show. Each season, we renovate two different historic homes—one step at a time—featuring quality craftsmanship and the latest in modern technology. We demystify home improvement and provide ideas and information so, whether you are doing it yourself or hiring out contractors, you’ll know the right way to do things or the questions to ask. Our experts including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor give you the tools you need to protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG How to Blast for a Foundation | This Old House https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Friday 19 March 2021

Cordless Router Review | Tool Lab | This Old House


The Bosch GKF12V-25N 12V router packs a lot of punch in a small, well-balanced footprint. Go to our Tool Lab review at https://ift.tt/3s3zfN1 to learn more about its features, specs, and performance. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. The Bosch GKF12V-25N [https://amzn.to/3vzFA50] compact cordless router looks unique, if not “odd,” but performs surprisingly well despite a few quirks.  It has a ¼-inch collet, features a brushless motor that runs on Bosch’s 12V battery platform [https://amzn.to/3r2A1ss] and spins at 13,000 RPMs, has a unique compact design, an inset on/off switch on the left side, battery indicator, multi-functional lockable height adjustment, a spindle lock, finger guards, and a large base plate. Features First up, the motor: at 13,000 RPMs and no variable speed dial, this may seem less versatile than other cordless routers on the market that run in the 25,000 RPM range and it is. This router is designed specifically for round-over or similar basic profiling and flush-trim applications. It excels at these things thanks to its ergonomic design. Your hand sits over the motor and spindle, giving you fantastic one-handed control. The large offset base plate provides a nice balance on the material and minimizes tipping. Operation is smooth and stable; there are detents on the base to help further steady if necessary.  The inset on/off switch is meant to make control easy during one-handed operation using your thumb–if you’re right-handed. If you’re left-handed, well, it’s a little awkward. Functionally, the switch is fine. The thing I like most about it is its safety feature: • If the battery dies and you install a new one without switching the tool off first, it won’t start back up without you first switching it off and back on again. • It also provides an error code in the battery indicator if the spindle is locked or if it needs to be reset for some reason. See more at TOH.com [https://ift.tt/3s3zfN1] Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House Insider to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: https://bit.ly/2GPiYbH Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N Tool Lab: Tool Lab is a series that features unbiased reviews and objective tests of new and noteworthy tools. In addition to reviews and testing, we’ll also be producing user guides, buying guides, and tips and tricks for getting the most out of tools. Tool Lab is geared towards those with pro-level experience or interest—those who are new to the trades, have been working in the trades, as well as advanced DIYers who want to know what pros know and want to perform at their level. Be sure to catch new reviews and content each week on ThisOldHouse.com/Tool-Lab or on YouTube. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG Cordless Router Review | Tool Lab | This Old House https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Autism Medication | Autism


Learn more about Autism with these Tools and Resources: NeuroTribes: The Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiversity: http://amzn.to/1MeQvSu Autism Breakthrough: The Groundbreaking Method: http://amzn.to/1PiTfUb 101 Games and Activities for Children With Autism: http://amzn.to/1Ru8qsR Stack It Peg Game With Board Occupational Therapy Game: http://amzn.to/1Zd77Us The Asperkid's (Secret) Book of Social Rules: http://amzn.to/1OlWHga Watch more How to Understand Autism videos: https://ift.tt/3tDLSPi [Theme music] There's no medication to treat or cure autism, however, medications are used to treat or cure autism. The only medication that is approved for use for children with autism spectrum disorder is Risperdal, and that is for particular aggressive behaviors and irritability. There's is no other medication as I am repeating to cure autism, however, you need to work with the symptoms and if you have a child with who has sleep difficulty, you would work with the sleep difficulty, whether you use magnesium or melatonin, which has been use as a supplement or medication to help with sleep. There's a lot data supporting that because children with autism spectrum have sleep problems and have difficulty with their melatonin and sleep cycle. So providing that kind of support will absolutely help symptoms and help the child's behavior. Other medications not as medications but if a child has seizure for example, you are treating the seizure with an anti-seizure medication, so you are treating the symptom again. If they have gastric reflux or constipation, you are dealing with that particular symptom. So that's where medications come in for use on a child with autism. Commonly use medications are stimulants for hyper activity and inattention. That again is treating the symptom. Off label use of medications is done off a lot with children and autism being not different. People are using clonidine to help with sleep as well as with hyper activity. There's a whole a whole slew of stimulant and non-stimulant medications, but they are also using nutraceuticals and herbs and Valerian for example as a sleepy time tea as been used to help children sleep. Studies have been done with nutraceuticals and magnesium, zinc as supplements that can be added on and actually medication works better when you have adequate levels of these nutrients. As we know with the use of amphetamines, you have adequate zinc levels because it will make it, you have better response. So the use of the medication is to treat symptoms that are seen in a child with autism spectrum disorder. [Theme music]

Thursday 18 March 2021

ASK This Old House | Radiator, Fireplace Veneer (S18 E3) FULL EPISODE


Jenn teaches Kevin how to plant a small herb garden with a cocktail theme; a homeowner’s radiator sprung away from the pipe when he tried to replace the valve, so Richard heads to his house to help him reconnect it; Mark replaces a homeowner’s sloppy fireplace surround with a clean, thin brick veneer. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. How to Plant a Cocktail Garden Jenn planted a variety of herbs to make up the cocktail garden, including basil amethyst, basil nufar, English thyme, rosemary prostrates, strawberry, dill, lemon thyme, verbena lemon, berggarten sage, mint mojito, rosemary barbecue, and lemon grass. These can be used to enhance a variety of different beverages. All these herbs can be found at nurseries. Expert assistance with this segment was provided by Mahoney's Garden Center and America's Test Kitchen. How to Reconnect a Radiator All the tools Richard used to reconnect the radiator, including wrenches, pipe dope, wicking, and the radiator valve, can all be found at home centers and plumbing supply houses. How to Install Thin Brick Veneer Mark installed General Shale French Quarter thin brick as a veneer over the old fireplace. He ordered both flat and corner thin bricks to make sure the fireplace opening looked fully covered. He secured the veneer to the wall using Quikrete Type N mortar. To template the brick placement, Mark used a brick ruler, which can be found at masonry supply stores. The materials Mark used to install the thin brick, including tuck pointers, trowels, and painter's tape can all be found at home centers. Expert assistance with this segment was provided by the Spaulding Brick Company. Enjoying full-episodes of This Old House? Join This Old House INSIDER to stream every episode ever made of This Old House (over 1,000 hours), commercial-free. https://bit.ly/32CLaGe Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N Products and Services from this episode America’s Test Kitchen Category: Kitchen Expert assistance America's Test Kitchen https://ift.tt/ubUWq6 General Shale https://ift.tt/1NrJkXc Category: Design, Fireplaces & Chimneys, Materials Manufacturer General Shale https://ift.tt/1NrJkXc Mahoney’s Garden Center Category: Landscaping Expert assistance Mahoney's Garden Center https://ift.tt/1wBLfCF Quikrete https://ift.tt/2Mdo97Z Category: Masonry, Materials Manufacturer Quikrete https://ift.tt/2Mdo97Z Spaulding Brick Company Category: Building Resources, Masonry, Materials Expert assistance Spaulding Brick Co. https://ift.tt/2PdhdY2 About Ask This Old House TV: From the makers of This Old House, America’s first and most trusted home improvement show, Ask This Old House answers the steady stream of home improvement questions asked by viewers across the United States. Covering topics from landscaping to electrical to HVAC and plumbing to painting and more. Ask This Old House features the experts from This Old House, including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor. ASK This Old House helps you protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG ASK This Old House | Radiator, Fireplace Veneer (S18 E3) FULL EPISODE https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Wednesday 17 March 2021

How to Say "Son" & "Daughter" 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/3rWzlWN How to say "son" in Greek. Son. Yi-os. Son. Yi-os. Now you try. You can also say daughter. Ko-ree. Daughter. Ko-ree. Now you try. And that's how to say "son" in Greek.

How to Get Shy Students to Participate | Classroom Management


How to get shy students to participate. This kind of depends on why they're not participating. If it's that they're afraid that they might not have the correct answer, that's one thing. If they just have a fear of public speaking, that's another thing. But here are two ideas that might help. This first idea is called "Over the Shoulder". So you pose a question to your class, and then instead of having them raise hands and or even calling on volunteers, you say, "Everybody right down a possible answer. Or draw something that represents a possible answer." And as your students are doing that, circulate around your room and look over the shoulder of Sally to see what she is writing or drawing. If you see that she has written a very interesting answer or the correct answer, then you bend down and you whisper in her ear and you say, "Sally. That is a fantastic answer. I really think that should be shared with the rest of the class." So now she knows she has the correct answer, and might be less shy about sharing that answer with the class. If she has a fear of public speaking, that's OK, too. I'll talk her answer. I will read it to the class. I will give her the credit. The key is, I'm trying to get her to take that first step on to the escalator of participation. And sometimes a strategy like "Over the Shoulder" can be that first step. Another strategy you might try is something I call "All Raised Hands". This is when you pose a question to your class and you say, "Everybody has to raise their hand. Now if you know the answer, I want your hand straight up, elbow locked. If you think you know the answer, or you have a partial answer or something interesting you want to contribute, give me an ell, or a right angle. And if you have no idea what the answer is, thumb to the head." Now, no matter how shy a particular student might be, they can still pick a hand position that represents what they feel like they could contribute to the answer to that question. If Sally, who is my shy student, has her hand straight up, then I can call on her knowing that she feels confident she has the correct answer. If she has her thumb to the head then I won't call on her, because I know she feels like she doesn't have the correct answer. Those are two ideas about helping a shy student participate more in class.

Tuesday 16 March 2021

This Old House | The Open Concept (S41 E3) | FULL EPISODE


The crew places a center beam in the old ranch house to support the second story. A hole is cut in the original foundation for a new basement window. Kevin visits an engineered lumber factory in Canada. Back at the project, Tommy and Jeff raise the end gables. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. The old ranch house will soon gain a second level. The open concept living space requires extra planning for support of the second story. Now that the first floor walls are framed, Jeff is ready to place the main support beam. Kevin finds the crew maneuvering the 1200 pound PSL beam. The new deck off the back of the house will block the existing basement windows. The homeowners want some light in the basement incase they decide to later improve the space. Kevin watches as a hole is cut in the old foundation for a basement window. Jeff and his team are big fans of the laminated strand lumber used for framing on this project. Kevin travels to Kenora, Canada to find out how and where it comes from. Plant manager Bill Candline gives him a tour. Back at the project, framing continues on the new upper level of the house. Tommy, Jeff and Jeff's crew are ready to raise the new gable ends. Enjoying full-episodes of This Old House? Join This Old House INSIDER to stream every episode ever made of This Old House (over 1,000 hours), commercial-free. https://bit.ly/32CLaGe Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N Products and Services from this episode Cast and Crew Lodging Category: Side Trip, Miscellaneous Side Trip The Margin Street Inn https://ift.tt/3bZPggh Concrete cutter Category: Building Resources, Contractors & Services Contractor RI Concrete Coring & Cutting 401-295-7137 Manufactured dimensional lumber Category: Building Resources, Materials, Side Trip Supplier Weyerhaeuser https://ift.tt/NI28s9 Weather membrane Category: Building Resources, Siding, Materials Supplier GCP Applied Technologies (Formerly Grace Residential Building Materials) https://gcpat.com/en About This Old House TV: This Old House is America’s first and most trusted home improvement show. Each season, we renovate two different historic homes—one step at a time—featuring quality craftsmanship and the latest in modern technology. We demystify home improvement and provide ideas and information so, whether you are doing it yourself or hiring out contractors, you’ll know the right way to do things or the questions to ask. Our experts including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor give you the tools you need to protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG This Old House | The Open Concept (S41 E3) | FULL EPISODE https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Monday 15 March 2021

How to Perform a Percolation Test | This Old House


Richard Trethewey learns how a perc test is used to assess the soil on the North Shore site. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. Richard Trethewey meets town official Brendhan Zubricki, who's performing a percolation test to assess the soil at the North Shore property. Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House Insider to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: https://bit.ly/2GPiYbH Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N About This Old House TV: This Old House is America’s first and most trusted home improvement show. Each season, we renovate two different historic homes—one step at a time—featuring quality craftsmanship and the latest in modern technology. We demystify home improvement and provide ideas and information so, whether you are doing it yourself or hiring out contractors, you’ll know the right way to do things or the questions to ask. Our experts including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor give you the tools you need to protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG How to Perform a Percolation Test | This Old House https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

How to Do a Clock Lunge | Sexy Butt


Like these Butt Workouts !!! Check out the official app http://apple.co/1j9RBY8 Trying to get Bootylicious? Here’s some resources to help you shape up: Jillian Michaels Killer Buns & Thighs: http://amzn.to/1L0kuQo 10 Minute Solution: Butt Lift: http://amzn.to/1N0sSjz Butt Workouts by Chia Booty: http://amzn.to/1jdGoXB Fat Burning Butt Lift & Thigh Workout for a Perfect Ass & Sexy Legs: http://amzn.to/1OmabbC Get That Bubble Butt!: How to Sculpt Your Butt: http://amzn.to/1jOzI1T Watch more Sexy Butt Workout videos: https://ift.tt/3tflZVM This is how to do a clock lunge for a sexy butt. So, think about a clock pretty much. You're going to lunge around, stepping out on your lunge, and then coming back to your starting position all the way around. You can start off facing forward. Your first lunge is going to be straight forward. You come all the way down in that lunge, sit low in it, and then right back. Then we're going to take it all the way around. So you come out a little bit more in between that 12 o'clock and that 3 o'clock, all the way down in that lunge, and then take it back. Then we're going to go for that side lunge that we did earlier. You're going to come all the way out, sit back in the lunge, and then take it back. Then we're going to step back, again 45 degree angle, step it all the way back this way, and then back to your starting position. And the last one is the back lunge. So you're stepping back with that leg, and then bringing it back. That's all on one side. Then you can switch to the other side and take it all the way back from 12:30 to 1 o'clock. In your lunges just make sure that, again, posture: shoulders are rolled back, chest is up, abs are tight. And every time you do a lunge that weight is loaded in that heel. Regardless of whether you're forward or out to the side in that side lunge, your weight is always loaded in the heel. Your hips are always back. Always think about the knee aligned with the ankle. You can look down at your leg right here, and if you see your knee passing forward of the ankle push it back. That's going to really help target the butt. Then bring it back to your starting position. So, I'll show you one more time without saying anything. Stepping forward, then 45 degrees, then to the side, then taking it back 45 degrees, and then taking it straight back behind you for that backward lunge. And that's how you do the clock lunge for a sexy butt.

Gordon Learns How To Drink A Yard of Ale | The F Word


Gordon learns a new vital life skill. _____________________________________________ #TheFWord #GordonRamsay #Food #Cooking 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

Saturday 13 March 2021

How to Apply Chalkboard Paint | House One | This Old House


Whether you’re creating an actual chalkboard or just enjoy a dark matte finish, here’s what you need to know to apply chalkboard paint. #ThisOldHouse #AskTOH SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse Cost: $15 Time: @30 minutes Skill level: Easy Tools • Foam roller cover [https://amzn.to/2N1XiMZ] • Roller frame [https://amzn.to/3epZKIG] • Paint tray and liner [https://amzn.to/3btDnA6] Materials • Chalkboard paint [http://thd.co/3enIxPS] • Primer (optional) [https://amzn.to/2OAt7gk] • 220-grit sanding sponge [https://amzn.to/3rzXxOl] • Lint-free cloths [https://amzn.to/30qlFH9] • Paint stick [https://amzn.to/3qBh6Ex] • Dropcloth [https://amzn.to/2ODMuVX] • Chalk [https://amzn.to/3l0TYhD] Steps for Applying Chalkboard Paint to Wood 1. If you’re coating bare wood, start by applying a primer. Chalk paint has a thinner consistency compared to traditional paint, so, once dry, sand the primer smooth and wipe the surface clean. 2. Open the can of chalkboard paint and thoroughly mix the paint.  3. Using a dense foam roller, apply the chalkboard paint in light, even coats. Try not to over-roll the paint. Let dry. 4. If additional coats are required, and they typically are, lightly sand the surface between coats and check the manufacture’s specification for proper recoat time. 5. After the final coat, allow the finish to cure for three days. 6. If you plan to write on the chalkboard, allow it to dry for three days and then condition the surface by pulling the side of a piece of chalk over the entire surface, and then wiping it with a clean, dry cloth. Now you’re ready to write! Cleaning the Chalkboard If you want to clean the chalkboard with a damp cloth, wait at least 7 days after applying the paint to do so. Otherwise, you can clean the surface with a traditional eraser or dry cloth between drawings. Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House Insider to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: https://bit.ly/2GPiYbH Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter http://bit.ly/AskTOHTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG Tumblr: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTumblr How to Apply Chalkboard Paint | House One | This Old House https://www.youtube.com/thisoldhouse/

Thursday 11 March 2021

ASK This Old House | Nursery Paint, Record Stand (S18 E2) FULL EPISODE


Mauro paints a baby's nursery using zero VOC paint; Richard tests out a new dryer that uses a heat pump to dry the clothes; Tom and Kevin build a record player stand out of oak plywood. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. How to Paint a Nursery Mauro painted the nursery using Natura Interior Paint by Benjamin Moore. The color is called "Antique Glass" in an eggshell finish. For any room, but especially a nursery, Mauro strongly recommends using zero VOC paint. It's virtually odorless and doesn't release any harmful chemicals as it dries. To test the walls for lead paint, Mauro used the LeadCheck Swabs test kit, manufactured by 3M.The other materials used for this project, including the paintbrushes, drop cloths, painters tape, and rags can all be found at home centers. Exploring a Heat Pump Clothes Dryer Richard tested out the Stackable Electric Ventless Heat Pump Dryer by Samsung. Build It | Record Player Stand Tom and Kevin built the record player stand out of 3/4" oak plywood and 1x4" and 1x3" red oak, which can be found at home centers. To cut all the boards to the proper dimensions and assemble the cabinet, Tom used a variety of tools, including a Domino Joiner, a Kapex KS120 sliding compound miter saw and a TS 55 circular saw, which are all manufactured by Festool. To secure the face of the cabinet to the base, Tom and Kevin used wood glue by Gorilla Glue. For the finish, Tom first applied a Pre-Stain wood conditioner, then a gel stain in Walnut. Both are manufactured by Minwax. Tom ordered prefinished legs from the internet. Enjoying full-episodes of This Old House? Join This Old House INSIDER to stream every episode ever made of This Old House (over 1,000 hours), commercial-free. https://bit.ly/32CLaGe Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N Products and Services from this episode Adhesive for building a record player stand Category: Materials Manufacturer The Gorilla Glue Company https://ift.tt/1mbRs1R Finish for the record player stand Category: Materials, Paints & Finishes Manufacturer Minwax Company http://www.minwax.com Natura interior zero VOC paint Category: Materials, Paints & Finishes, Millwork & Moldings Manufacturer Benjamin Moore https://ift.tt/R0iFUB “Antique Glass” in an eggshell finish Stackable electric ventless heat pump dryer Category: Appliances, Bathroom, Electrical, Plumbing Manufacturer Samsung Test for lead paint Category: Building Resources, Materials, Miscellaneous, Safety & Security Manufacturer 3M http://www.3m.com Tools used to build a record player stand Category: Tools Manufacturer Festool https://ift.tt/1gfHHzh [Segment Description] E.G. About Ask This Old House TV: From the makers of This Old House, America’s first and most trusted home improvement show, Ask This Old House answers the steady stream of home improvement questions asked by viewers across the United States. Covering topics from landscaping to electrical to HVAC and plumbing to painting and more. Ask This Old House features the experts from This Old House, including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor. ASK This Old House helps you protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG ASK This Old House | Nursery Paint, Record Stand (S18 E2) FULL EPISODE https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Wednesday 10 March 2021

A Tour of Factory-Built Houses | This Old House


Norm Abram and Tom Silva tour factory-built homes. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. Norm Abram and Tom Silva tour other factory homes built 5 years ago and 105 years ago, learning about the methods used for assembly. Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House Insider to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: https://bit.ly/2GPiYbH Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N About This Old House TV: This Old House is America’s first and most trusted home improvement show. Each season, we renovate two different historic homes—one step at a time—featuring quality craftsmanship and the latest in modern technology. We demystify home improvement and provide ideas and information so, whether you are doing it yourself or hiring out contractors, you’ll know the right way to do things or the questions to ask. Our experts including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor give you the tools you need to protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG A Tour of Factory-Built Houses | This Old House https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Tuesday 9 March 2021

This Old House | Chimney Down and Walls Up (S41 E2) | FULL EPISODE


Mark and Jeff take down the chimney. Scott and Shayla window shop. Jeff and Richard find new plumbing products. The ranch’s exterior walls come down. Jeff decides to reuse the original rafters. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. At the old Westerly Ranch House, the roof was disassembled to add a new level, but the original chimney is going to be in the way of the open floor plan concept on the first floor. Jeff works with mason Mark McCullough to take down the center chimney brick by brick. A major addition also means new windows and that's a big investment. Scott and Shayla meet with architectural designer Lori Foley for a window-shopping spree at a local showroom where they consider price, material, color, grill pattern, and door hardware. Back at the house, the original exterior walls were made of 2x4 framing material and were only 8 feet high. Instead, Jeff wants to use 2x6 manufactured framing lumber for strength and added insulation and raise the new ceiling to 9 feet. The old walls get sliced into sections and pushed out. As demolition continues at the house, Jeff is thinking about purchasing building materials. Richard joins him at a convention in Las Vegas to check out the latest plumbing fixtures. Meanwhile, at the house, the foundation is squared off and ready for framing. Kevin finds Jeff's crew as they start to frame the main part of the house. Jeff uses manufactured framing stock, but the original rafters were in such good shape they decided to rip them to a desired dimension to repurpose for interior wall framing. Enjoying full-episodes of This Old House? Join This Old House INSIDER to stream every episode ever made of This Old House (over 1,000 hours), commercial-free. https://bit.ly/32CLaGe Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N Products and Services from this episode Affordable Housing Organization Category: Building Resources, Materials, Contractors & Services, Miscellaneous Contractor South County Habitat for Humanity, RI https://ift.tt/2MEWZaK Cast and Crew Lodging Category: Miscellaneous, Side Trip Supplier The Margin Street Inn https://ift.tt/3bZPggh Concrete cutter Category: Building Resources, Contractors & Services Contractor South County Concrete Foundations 401-783-3830 International Builders’ Show Category: Building Resources, Side Trip, Design Side Trip International Builders’ Show (IBS) https://ift.tt/1eOjds9 Manufactured dimensional lumber Category: Building Resources, Materials Supplier Weyerhaeuser https://ift.tt/NI28s9 Plumbing fixtures | Westerly Project Category: Design, Building Resources, Materials, Plumbing Manufacturer Kohler Co http://www.kohler.com Window and Door Shopping Category: Doors & Hardware, Side Trip, Windows Supplier Humphrey’s Window and Door Design https://ift.tt/2zlKEkE About This Old House TV: This Old House is America’s first and most trusted home improvement show. Each season, we renovate two different historic homes—one step at a time—featuring quality craftsmanship and the latest in modern technology. We demystify home improvement and provide ideas and information so, whether you are doing it yourself or hiring out contractors, you’ll know the right way to do things or the questions to ask. Our experts including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor give you the tools you need to protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG This Old House | Chimney Down and Walls Up (S41 E2) | FULL EPISODE https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

How to Help a Child Cope with Cancer | 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/3bvXMo9 I'm going to talk to you about how to help a child cope with cancer. The first thing is to realize that it's a child going through the experience and it might be different for them than it is for you watching them. You want nothing more than to take it away from them and actually be the one that's in that bed or getting that medicine instead. But what you can do is not necessarily take the cancer away, but you can make sure that they have some skills for dealing with managing that cancer and living with that cancer. When I worked with kids with cancer and their families, it was remarkable how resilient those children could be. But there were times when they had to manage an awful lot. When you are helping a child cope with cancer, you are helping them with two different kinds of things. One is the actual physical effects of the cancer and maybe the disease itself causes pain or different ability or they have limited abilities because of where the cancer is, if it's a bone tumor or if they have leukemia blood disorder. And then they have to deal with the management of that physical aspects of the disease, whether there is the chemotherapy or radiation. And then there is the emotional aspect of the disease -- how they feel about themselves, their identity, how they are integrated in their regular life with their friends in school. And there is a few things that you can do to help them with all those different things they are dealing with. First is talk to them, be honest, use the real words, they are going to be around people talking about these things, and you want to make sure they understand what's going on in very age appropriate language. You might use books or coloring books or help them express what's going on with stories and pictures. And then you want to have them be involved and have some choice in whatever is going on. And again choice that's appropriate to their age and their situation. A child doesn't necessarily have a choice about taking their medicine, but they may be able to choose whether they take it with apple juice or chocolate milk. They may be able to choose whether they do it before their story or after their story. A teenager may be able to pick the days that they go for treatment because they still want to be involved with an extracurricular activity at school. So choice helps them feel more in control. It also means you want to have them involved with as many normalizing activities as possible, doing age appropriate things, things that their peers are doing, things that the family is doing, so that they don't feel so different, or left out because cancer may make them feel like they are changed in some way and not like everybody else. You also want to make sure you monitor how you parent these kids because these days, kids with cancer grow up to be healthy long-living adults. And what you do and how you parent them as a child now will impact them later on. So it means sometimes they still have appropriate limits. They don't get spoiled with too many presents although people will of course give them some extra things, and that's appropriate and sometimes even necessary. But you still want to make sure that who they are as kids and having all of those normal experiences both as a child that sometimes needs to go to bed on time as well as sometimes needs those extra hugs because they are going through something that's a little tough. You always want to make sure that children understand that the cancer is not their fault, and correct any misinformation they have or anything that's in their imagination about what happened.

How to Say "Take Me to the Airport" | 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/2N7YWNi How to say "Please take me to the airport." Proszę zabrać mnie na lotnisko. Pro-shei za-brach mnyea nah lote-neesko. So let's break this down. Proszę, the sz makes a sh sound, and the e with an accent is an elm, so pro-shei. Zabrać, the c with an accent makes a ch sound, za-brach. Mnie, mnyea nah lote-neesko, lote-neesko. Pro-shei za-brach mnyea nah lote-neesko. And at full speed, it sounds like this: Proszę zabrać mnie na lotnisko. Go ahead. Now you give it a shot. Great. To say, "I need to catch my flight," you say, "Muszę złapać lot." Moo-shei zwah-patch lote. So let's break these three words down. Muszę an sz is a sh sound, and then the e with an accent under it is an elm, so shei, moo-shei. Złapać, the l with a line through it is an accent that turns it into a wu, and then the c with an accent on top makes it a ch, so swah-patch. Moo-shei zwah-patch lote, that's the easy one. Moo-shei zwah-patch lote. Muszę złapać lot. Go ahead, you give it a shot. Perfect. That's how you say "Please take me to the airport."

Monday 8 March 2021

How to Reproduce Hand-Carved Newel Posts | This Old House


Norm Abram sees how a craftsman carves two newel posts to match the original at the Belmont Victorian. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. Norm Abram visits Matt Diana, an old-school craftsman who is carving two newel posts to match the existing one on the main staircase at the Belmont Victorian. Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House Insider to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: https://bit.ly/2GPiYbH Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N About This Old House TV: This Old House is America’s first and most trusted home improvement show. Each season, we renovate two different historic homes—one step at a time—featuring quality craftsmanship and the latest in modern technology. We demystify home improvement and provide ideas and information so, whether you are doing it yourself or hiring out contractors, you’ll know the right way to do things or the questions to ask. Our experts including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor give you the tools you need to protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG How to Reproduce Hand-Carved Newell Posts | This Old House https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Gordon Ramsay Hunts & Cooks Rabbit | The F Word


Gordon Ramsay takes his son Jack to hunt and cook Rabbit. _____________________________________________ #TheFWord #GordonRamsay #Food #Cooking 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 . #TheFWord #GordonRamsay #Food #Cooking

Sunday 7 March 2021

How to Install a Brand New Kitchen | This Old House


Kevin O’Connor helps Tom Silva install the Belmont kitchen cabinets. The kitchen counters are installed. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. Tom Silva and Kevin O’Connor install the Belmont kitchen cabinets. Norm Abram finds kitchen designer Linda Cloutier overseeing the kitchen countertop installation, and discovers her unique idea for the kitchen sink. Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House Insider to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: https://bit.ly/2GPiYbH Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N About This Old House TV: This Old House is America’s first and most trusted home improvement show. Each season, we renovate two different historic homes—one step at a time—featuring quality craftsmanship and the latest in modern technology. We demystify home improvement and provide ideas and information so, whether you are doing it yourself or hiring out contractors, you’ll know the right way to do things or the questions to ask. Our experts including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor give you the tools you need to protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG How to Install a Brand New Kitchen | This Old House https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/

Saturday 6 March 2021

How to Whitewash Wood | House One | This Old House


Whether you’re revamping an old piece of furniture or treating bare wood, a whitewash finish is the perfect way to lighten the look while still maintaining a hint of the wood grain #ThisOldHouse #AskTOH SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse Cost: $15 Time: 30 minutes Skill level: Easy Materials Lint free-cloth [https://amzn.to/387D9wn] White paint [https://amzn.to/3bSZZZK] Water or premix [https://amzn.to/308jCr4] Cup Paint stick [https://amzn.to/2PrlmJX] Tools Paintbrush [https://amzn.to/3kLQu2r] Putty knife [https://amzn.to/3bXINlP] What is the Difference Between Whitewash and Paint? Whitewash is a semi-opaque finish applied to an existing finish or bare wood with the goal of allowing the base coat or wood grain to show through. Paint is applied and dried as a solid coating that does not allow the wood grain to be seen through it. Using Premixed Whitewash vs. Making it To achieve this look, you can use a premixed option or make your own by mixing water and white paint. I’m going to be mixing one part water with one part white water-based paint. Steps for Mixing Whitewash 1. Stir the mix, and then brush it onto the wood. Wait a minute for it to soak in, but not so long that the paint starts to dry or feel tacky. 2. Using a cloth, wipe away the excess. Wiping lightly with a slightly damp cloth will leave a more opaque finish while wiping several times with a dry cloth will create a more transparent finish. 3. For an even more opaque finish, allow the paint to dry and then apply a second coat. 4. Another option to increase or decrease the opacity is to change the ratio of water to paint. Tips for Applying Whitewash to Wood Once you know the basics, try these variations: • Apply water to a board to raise or “pop” the grain. Apply the whitewash solution, and then scrape it off with a putty knife to highlight the grain. • Next try applying a layer of gray paint mixed with water to a wood that would typically have a yellow undertone, like pine, to mute the color. • Once dry, apply a whitewash finish to complete the look. • Lastly, apply dark stain to a rough wood. Once dry, apply a whitewash and then scrape off the excess for a weathered rustic look. Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House Insider to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: https://bit.ly/2GPiYbH Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter http://bit.ly/AskTOHTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG Tumblr: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTumblr How to Whitewash Wood | House One | This Old House https://www.youtube.com/thisoldhouse/

Friday 5 March 2021

Using and Tuning Up a Compound-Miter Saw | Tool Lab | This Old House


A miter saw is a smart tool to have in your workshop. It is often used to cut moldings, baseboards, and trim with accuracy. Learn more tips and tricks for how to safely and accurately cut with a compound-miter saw. SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse. Miter saws, especially the dual-bevel slide-style ones that are common now, are complex machines that don’t stay true forever. We expect them to be perfect out of the box, but at the end of the day, they show up on our doorsteps after a long journey — boxes worn, dinged, and bruised. Learn how to use, tune-up, and maintain your miter saw for years to come. How to Use a Sliding Compound-Miter Saw • Step 1: Without turning the saw on, lower the blade and line up the cutline on the workpiece with the blade’s teeth. Then raise the blade head and pull it all the way toward you. • Step 2: With the blade head in the “up” position, start the saw and let the blade come up to speed. Slowly pull the head down to engage the blade with the workpiece. • Step 3: Hold the head down as you push the blade all the way through the work. • Step 4: Continue to hold the head down as you release the trigger. Wait until the blade comes to a complete stop, then bring the head back to its starting position. Tip: For smooth cuts, less tear-out  • Pull the blade head partway down in Step 2, and make a shallow score across the stock’s surface in Step 3. • Pull the blade head back, then push it all the way down and through the stock at the score line. See more at TOH.com [https://ift.tt/2OsBGtG] Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House Insider to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: https://bit.ly/2GPiYbH Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet: https://ift.tt/3jclZ3N Tool Lab: Tool Lab is a series that features unbiased reviews and objective tests of new and noteworthy tools. In addition to reviews and testing, we’ll also be producing user guides, buying guides, and tips and tricks for getting the most out of tools. Tool Lab is geared towards those with pro-level experience or interest—those who are new to the trades, have been working in the trades, as well as advanced DIYers who want to know what pros know and want to perform at their level. Be sure to catch new reviews and content each week on ThisOldHouse.com/Tool-Lab or on YouTube. Follow This Old House: Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG Using and Tuning Up a Compound-Miter Saw | Tool Lab | This Old House https://www.youtube.com/user/thisoldhouse/