18 2017 11 52 a m.
Burnt wood house siding.
Western red cedar is a renewable resource and we offer fsc certified sustainable options and it doesn t contain any nasty chemicals that are released into the environment or your house.
Shou sugi ban or yakisugi are uv resistant weather resistant rot resistant and bug resistant and can last upwards of 80 years with little to no maintenance.
Literally translating to burnt cedar board in english shou sugi ban traditionally involves scorching wooden boards with a torch or controlled fire cooling the wood softening the char with a.
Specifically homeowner jon friesen and his father david took the house s siding big boards of douglas fir and torched each piece to give it a charred blackened surface.
Gendai is the most commonly specified yakisugi shou sugi ban surface for exterior applications.
In many cases using our charred wood instead of painted stained wood siding or another siding material can actually be significantly cheaper over the long run.
Shou sugi ban burnt wood exterior cladding is naturally made very durable originated as a japanese wood finish for homes revealing the beauty of the natural preserved timber ecohome published.
Charred wood shou sugi ban burnt wood siding.
Wood is about as classic as you can get for siding material for your home but that doesn t mean you don t have plenty of creative finishes to choose from.
The two most common ways of customizing wood siding are to play around with the board pattern mixing vertical and horizontal going diagonal decoratively shaped shingles etc or to use unique surface treatments.
With traditional painted siding you have the cost of the siding installation costs paint and painting costs and then repainting again every 10 or so years.
There s some flexibility in exactly how it s done and there are various looks that can be achieved.
A light brushing process knocks down the heavy soot layer and leaves a smooth silky appearance.
For our siding we re using an old japanese technique for preserving wood called shou sugi ban a k a.
Charred cedar although any number of species of wood could work.