With board batten certainteed has recreated a siding favored by early settlers to protect and beautify homes and outbuildings.
Finishing board and batten siding.
The alternating vertical layout of wide boards and narrow strips of batten placed at every seam can also be an attractive rustic style for a house or vacation cabin.
The increased popularity of rainscreens lends itself well to a revival of board and batten siding.
Traditionally board and batten siding starts with wide vertical planks boards which are then joined together by thin vertical strips battens to cover the seams.
Board and batten siding is a rough style of planking that is often applied to barns and shedlike structures.
A rainscreen is created when siding is spaced off the building s sheathing moisture barrier with furring strips.
The painted finish is a baked on enamel paint over primer and g90 galvanized steel.
Alternating wide and narrow vertical panels combine in a simple yet beautiful design well suited to distinctive architectural styles.
Western red cedar has been used in a board and batten configuration for years.
Re siding your house with hardiepanel vertical siding or combining it with hardieplank lap siding is sure to add visual punch to your design.
The boards may be placed horizontally or vertically.
In appearance board and batten siding can look rustic or modern depending on how rough the lumber is and its finish.
Homesteaders and farmers would use sawmills to cut the long boards and the battens were put in place to make the structure as airtight as possible.
By factory finishing these natural wood products each board will be encapsulated protecting them from moisture and harmful.
While traditional board and batten siding uses wide boards and overlying narrow battens there are multiple variations of the conventional narrow over wide technique.
Edco board batten carries a lifetime non prorated limited warranty that covers material and labor and a fade chalk warranty up to 35 years entex prism finishes or 10 years pvc finish.
Perhaps the most common arrangement uses 1x10 boards and 1x2 or 1x3 batten.
Thus horizontal siding became mainstream and board and batten fell by the wayside except for mostly post and beam outbuildings.
Board and batten siding recently installed on our boathouse using cedar boards stained with cabot solid color acrylic deck stain in dark slate.
True board and batten is made with vertically installed wide boards and narrow battens fastened over the gaps between the boards.