 Now we've got the sheathing on the roof And it's starting to actually look like a structure and not just a big box sitting on the ground I see I got my ledges up there so I could Progressively put the the sheathing up top so there's There is let's see one sheet there one sheet there and they're cut to length another sheet another sheet And then a thin a thinner strip going across top about nine inches wide And same on the other side And I left a gap on the inside up near the ridge for the ridge vents, so let's see if we can see that. Yeah There's the gap on either side of the ridge for the ridge vents and There's a slight gap between each of the pieces sheathing That's for expansion due to humidity things like that and That's about it for the sheathing right now. I'm gonna put on the felt paper actually on the other thing I did as I put on So you can see it up there the drip edge so the drip edges to keep water off of Your your seams so water doesn't seep in and there so you put the drip edge on This piece the fascia board here Then you put the felt paper on and then you put drip edge going along this rafter here And that'll keep wind from blowing up into the Under the the felt paper and the shingles and blowing your shingles off. That's what that's for So now I'm gonna put on the felt paper then put on the other drip edge And then I'm ready to put on the shingles Now I've got the I've skipped a few steps, but I put the tar paper on Like I said I was going to say yeah see there's a seam for the tar paper up there and you Overlapped the top sheet over the bottom sheet so that if water gets on it it all flows down. It doesn't hit your structure and See the drip edge over there on the edge I don't know if I can get to that corner, but you'll see that this drip edge under here is underneath That drip edge on the side So it goes The drip edge is under here and then the tar paper is on tar paper is on top and Then that drip edge is on top of both of those things along the edge so that water gets on there it goes away from your structure and Now I've started to do the shingling and if you look at these guys you'll say where are they upside down and I asked that same question to my friend who's showing me this and he Eventually answered that it's a starter row so what you what you do that for is because when you've got your shingles and you've got These edges are these these channels here that are open. They're not normally they're facing this way But for the first row you do It this way So that when you put things on top Like this seam here isn't touching your tar paper. There's another shingle under there So when water eventually channels its way down here it goes here and it touches a shingle instead of touching the tar paper or your structure And it's like that all the way down there and so this edge right there. It's the same deal Instead of having another edge or instead of having just the tar paper right underneath it You have a shingle and that keeps water off your structure. So I've got The first row I've got the starter row done first row almost done and this is pretty quick Just keep nailing it and you need to make sure that when you nail your rows You want to nail somewhere near this little strip because when you overlap your shingles nailing here So let's say the second row Nailing here makes it so that you nail at the top edge of this shingle So when you nail these things in they're nailed here and here because if they're only nailed here, that's a bad thing so you want to make sure you put at least two Nails in each shingle for each place that you now So I'm gonna get to it see how it comes along Now I've got the roof all done. Yay Well, it's all shingled and the roof is Weather-proofed, so I don't need to worry about rain anymore, which is the main goal Trying to get the roof on But as I showed before the shingles went on row after row You just kind of stagger and you can see the the stair step pattern and that's really you need to follow the directions inside of your shingles package And that seems to be one of those things where you have to read the directions Because I got two different types of shingles one the first one I didn't get enough of because I didn't read the package properly because it was poorly labeled anyway The directions on that were completely different from the directions for these ones of you the first ones were architectural shingles These ones were three tab shingles Anyway, everything went on pretty smoothly you can see up at the top. There's a ridge vent. I'll get up there in a minute tarp but I started on This side over here work my way over Which leaves? overhang of your shingles, so you just have to go through with a Shingle blade and cut them. Let me show you that real quick this thing is A blade for cutting shingles invaluable Regular razor blades don't work very well this one cuts through them like butter, especially when they're warm or hot From the from the noonday Sun Anyways that goes all the way up there, and I don't know if you know this from last time But I put some put these blocks in to stabilize These rafters on the outside before they were a little a little jiggly since they don't rest on the wall So those blocks were were necessary The spacing isn't very important. It was just get them stable and that worked And you can see the drip edge there And the drip edge over there And now I will cross dissolve up to the The roof so you can see what the the ridge vent looks like All right up on the roof now And you can see the shingles up close See their Nails under there nails of strip and what I found very important with these these are three tabs shingles from Home Depot But right underneath this black strip on the other side of the shingle is another black strip with tar I assume it has plastic over it. You should take the plastic off anyways, so here's the ridge vent and We got all our shingles On there and here's the here's the edge up close. It's No shingles shingles shingles and you can see up there the drip edges is cut on This part you just snip it and then you can bend it over your ridge And I'll hope that you can see this each of these is one tab of these three tab shingles it's just one tab cut and Kind of tapered back a little on each edge And then they're just laid on top of each other and then nailed And then those go on first and then you get the ridge vent and I got this from Home Depot comes in four-foot sections You just lay it in the middle nail it in And make sure that on your inside of your roof You've got I don't know if you can see that there's a gap and that is for the vent So the idea is that all of your hot air from your structure Goes up up up to the ridge is the highest point because that's what hot air does it rises and goes through that ridge vent and comes out Those holes there and I don't think you see these holes here So see put that on and then you just shingle over it like you shingle here nail through it and Eventually somewhere in the middle My friend who knows about roofing was helping me with this. It was invaluable And we needed a rope while we were up here at the top wasn't didn't feel safe But you double back so you you put one of these shingles you put one of these shingles But then you have the black stuff showing so then you just take the the colored material From your shingles and you put that back on top of your black stuff And you nail it in and then put some roofing tar Or something like that on it and then you're all set and you get a Nice ridge vent. You got all your shingles. Fortunately a bunch of pine needles already on it But it's a shed. It'll it'll it'll deal with it Anything else? I'll think so right now So I've got a few more things I can do Well few there's still a lot to be done. So I need to do the siding need windows I need to anchor My structure Well, so our building codes require that a shed 12 by 12 have the corners anchored into the ground and I Would think these pylons would be fine, but as an extra measure. I'm going to I'm going to take some Cable some steel cable and Drill a hole In each corner washing two holes a hole right there and a hole right there And then wrap the steel cable around the edges have that go down underneath the structure and go under those four by fours So it creates a loop and then just tie that off With some fair rules. I don't know if that's how you pronounce the word, but that's what I'm going to use so I've got quite a few things I still need to do and Fortunately stuff is already in the shed Stuff that was in the garage, but I think I can work around that and I need hurricane ties for those rafters up there So still a lot of work to do Find out what I'm going to do next