My Main Takeaway: I should have found and paid for higher skilled labor to complete this custom detail, who have extensive experience in completing the exact custom detail. My mistake was that I tried to complete this challenging detail as a beginner builder by asking subcontractors to try it for the first time. I set myself up for failure. Never the less, let's learn together and do better on the next one. Thanks for 100K. Road to 1 Million!
That is exactly right my man, this a $1M+ home, it’s another league in this game, you needed capo de capos for this build, I would’ve invested in higher skilled labor and have my people or I learned from them every single step so that I can use it for all my future build. You gotta pay to learn somehow. Keep it up brother love these series!
Yea high end carpenter/contractor here small biz custom work I have not done the flush base except for kitchen cabinets.But I think Run drywall long Scribe base Snap line on drywall Cut install a trim Nail off base
You’ve accomplished so much as a new builder. Failure builds character, strength, resilience and knowledge. Thank you for your transparency. Keep up the great work! 💪🏾
We are currently working on a new construction home in Southern California. We are doing a similar shadow reveal detail above the baseboard and around all the door jambs. I advised the builder we are working with to install the baseboard first, and then we would install the shadow bead above the finished baseboard. Another builder we worked with had another drywall contractor install the shadow bead before the baseboard, and he got the same results (uneven reveal above the baseboard). He spent thousands ripping it off and redoing this detail. I learned from his mistake. Many builders have asked me to install the shadow bead before the baseboard, and I always tell them about the story of what happened to that builder. It works every time.
You're doing great man, especially with all the custom details. Don't sweat it. For the gap under the flush baseboard, increase your shadow gap a bit and scribe the baseboard against the floor.
Stud Pack did the same baseboards. I didn't even know that was a thing then the two Texas channel's I watch have really good detailed videos on it. NIcely done.
I'll be the first to admit, this is an extremely long video, and I found myself fast forward and skipping around. But PLEASE do not let that beginning statement deter or undermine what you're doing. First, bro you're YOUNG and the fact you're doing a custom build is absolutely amazing! Many kudos on that front alone! Second, thank you for sharing your experiences, especially the failures. Without failure we will never learn. If we never share those failures, how will others learn? With that said you have a bright career/future in both building and UA-cam. It speaks volumes to your work ethic and character how much all these little details matter, which in your trade, they should! I absolutely look forward to seeing a V2 of this and how you're going to tackle things differently.
The last house I did about 5 years ago we did a flush base with ringlet, and we lasered in. We put a strip of plywood and I think we put a metal flashing on it and set sheetrock into it, then level 5 walls with veneer plaster and scribet the base to leave a 1/4" space between on polished cement floors coated with Rydax. I think we notched the top of the base to give the shadow line.
You’re doing well! We’re on our 4th built here in Houston and little mistakes are made here and there. I have order wrong door sizes, cabinets etc.. we just have to act quick so solve the little issues. Can’t wait to see your pool built! We want to do it at our house.
Appreciate the transparency and humbleness, great job. Man how do you find the time to do all of this, videos and crazy busy with your business and other duties.
I am a real estate broker and agent for 35 years. I thought I knew it all but lost so much on needles things and things that had to be redone. So I feel your pain. I probably threw away $15,000 easily. I learned what not to do and there will be a next time. I was too ambitious and costs kept ticking up. Thanks for being honest and showing fails. I am sure in the end, the home will be beautiful. I think that door trim won't look like a mistake. It should look fine.
I would have installed temporary spacers full length everywhere laser leveled but leaving a small 1/4 +/- gap below to allow for out of level variations at the finished floor. Then after removing these & adding your plastic reveal strips, each and every piece of base *must* be scribed to fit. Takes a lot longer to do, but high-end contemporary details require this level of attention.
I'm an architect and a builder in LA we always detail all the connections and flooring and run it with all the subs ahead of time. Modern home is a lot of detail and extra work. I failed too even as an architect when I was building my own house 4 years ago doing it
That’s great info, I learned a lot on this project and I will request the architect to draw the details in the future so all the subcontractors are on the same page.
I’m in paint prep process & just went through that same issue with doors. Painful! Lightpole installed today so hopefully it gets moving! Been on this build since may of this year.
It still looks pretty good. Love all the extra details you give us. When it comes to trimless door feature, would you chat a little about deciding against delaying the build to fix the doors before installing them or possibly outright replacing all of them?
Damm I wish I’d seen your video before. I would have guide you with the best approach and send you pictures of the trim less doors. I’ve done this many times.
I know you are probably done in the garage but you should insulate the walls. It will make it much nicer in warmer or colder weather. Because maybe later down the road you might want to add a mini split. Also you could run cable on internet so you can add a tv and stereo
Amazing work, gives me the inspiration to start doing stuff around my house en optimize it. Just wondering, how do you balance this with a family and young children? I have two and it is absurdly hard to balance this stuff.
As a high end carpenter. I would of told you day one you are going to have gaps at the bottom of trim on a polished concrete floor. those will never be perfectly level. Im not even at that part of the video. But I was wondering how you were gonna get away without shoemold without floors in. Then you answered my question. With the doors, he should of asked for your drywall finish so he could of dialed it in before fully installing the door. He should of also full finished corners with osb to help the drywall guys out, it also didnt help he didnt lazer line all temp trim around. He could of scribed to the floor if he didnt set it to high.
Sure stretch caulking I would use on the doors with it beenin new home on settlement looking awesome I. Have watched you from the beginning doing good buddy for a young man .👍
Probs too late but saw the flush baseboard installed by sheeting the drywall as normally and then just going around and cutting the drywall from bottom with multi tool and template piece to get right height. Then installing the z channel
Did roofing make you confident to go into go construction? Curious if inspections would be a good way to get into flipping. Assume you can do that on the side.
Modern Contemporary homes with clean lines are the hardest to build.. You can't hide errors. It has to be perfect. Yes, you have to hire very skilled tradesmen that understand fine details. Your baseboard ledger should have been laser leveled and then scribe the baseboard to the concrete.
A decent finish carpenter could make the baseboard work with uneven floors. You'd just have to scribe the bottom of the baseboard to the floor. Pretty standard stuff, not that difficult and definitely cheaper than installing 8" baseboard over 6" :)
What happened…went from initial pool build episode to a fully insulated home and installing drywall. Any reasons on going with pink insulation rather than spray foam or rockwool ?
Bruh. Ill answer all your construction questions and share my opinion on the best way to prepare for a project like that. I'm in Houston. We live and learn.
Next time flush mount the door on one side, by installing it even with the wall. and on the inside use the same trim gap as the baseboard. Or buy the wood and have the carpenter build you door jams you probably could have had him do it for a few hundred.
i love the flushless baseboards butg wehy is there the shadow reveal on everyones installs? just have them flush or add led lights. not adding lighting is a huge missed opportunity in all these installs ( not just yours) imo.
I think you approached the process incorrectly from the start. 1. I would suggest on the next build to use a laser to achieve straight revel line 2. If the floor is not levelled, you should have a professional finish carpenter to scribe the floor line into the baseboard. Your only mistake was using the plywood and not a simple laser based chock line as a reference for the drywallers.
Planning is key. Don’t remember if you said you ordered stock sized doors but you should’ve returned them to order the custom doors instead. Don’t know if you knew that most suppliers will take back stock especially if they are basic doors. That would have been my suggestion. Sure it would have set you back a bit but it’s your home not a customer’s home. As for the flooring, yeah since you used that ply material to protect your polished floors, I’m sure it screwed up the measurements. That and did the guy take the time to throw a laser level all around, did the Sheetrock crew understand the importance of keeping that bottom piece squared up? Looks and sounds like they just dropped it on the spacers and didn’t take the time to get it right. I would have and have done in the past hired a guy who would have cut the bottom of the drywall off to size off a laser level to get the straightest square possible for the best reveal. Like used 5” off cuts and then cut it square at 6.5” for the perfect 1/2 reveal all around. Live and learn. Good job btw. I know these storms have kept us busy for sure. 👍🏼
To start don’t use pocket doors. Level 5 is not a smooth surface. It’s just the opposite. You want a inconsistent surface so your eye can’t follow a straight line. Also use a J channel on drywall returns. You could have scribed the base board to the floor. It’s very time consuming. Just because something is trending and may look good doesn’t mean it’s better.
BASEBOARDS - you should have purchased 1x8 and acribbed the base to the concrete and any experienced finish carpenter could have done that. Yes it would have cost you double plus because of the extra labor scribbing the base to the floor & This Old House did the treatment you wanted in their 2005 season where they did that modern no trim around the windows and doors and the inset base trim. They brought in a special Italian (yes from Italy) plaster contractor - that modern house back in 2005 in Boston area cost at the time over 5 million that's about 8.5 million today's money. If they still had their episodes on here I'd shoot you that link but they don't
Quality, Speed, Price....the unattainable triangle. The more you get into higher end homes with deeper details is when you start to notice the sometimes hidden effects of fast paced labor. Love your work. Got a lot of clients asking for drywall return this year so found this ironic, keep going.
honestly, not a fan. Makes it look like low income housing or a psych ward. Ornate trim is what made homes look high class in years past. Look at castles and royal palaces in old European countries. Trim was a symbol of status and they went out of their way to make it look amazing, not try and make it unnoticeable.
I think you could have accomplished the baseboards correctly if you had: 1. Cut the cardboard off the floor 2. Laid out a full set of temporary baseboards resembling the EXACT shape (or the exact shape + the shadow space) of the ones you intended to put in. Not just partial boards every few feet. This would allow you to compensate everywhere that there are imperfections. I believe it would all allow the drywallers and finishers to complete their work and do their damage to the temporary boards, and then you could just swap them out with the permanent ones. In my head this works out -- but correct me if I'm wrong :) Also I'd personally go with metal door frames :D
I shut the video off when he said “I’d have to get a higher skilled labor which I’m not willing to do” I should have turned it off at the all black with a backwards hat and a chain on 💀
Unless you have a supper good concrete guy, those slabs are never flat, plus or minus 3/8" minimum would be a normal job with more finishers than you had.
the panel rey drywall is bad quality, the drywall base boar is easy to do it , the the house is not moder enough to do the revel architecture aluminun metal and flat base boar
Bro just has money, but has no time, no patience and no good builders. In Europe we have lasers and builders is learning new things if they dont know how to do or how it works 😅
Great video! I’m going to be trying this exact detail on my new house and I know the concrete isn’t perfect. I wonder if scribing to the floor like at 3:20 in this video will work? ua-cam.com/video/dMurGIUVEtY/v-deo.html
Man it must be difficult doing what you do without knowing what your doing.. good luck to ya. I gotta say, I do build homes from scratch. I mean I actually do all of the physical building from the ground up, everything.. So when you call yourself a builder I and all other actual builders take offense .. At best your a contractor/check writer
@@kevinsanchez8872 This place is a mess. He’s trying to sell a product off of this build. It’s cheap the finish is so poor you would get better in social housing. You hire speed contractors and pay pennies you get what he got. Yes you are right it’s insulting.
A builder is the correct name for what he is. To do what he is doing at least in my state, you have to get your “home builders license”. A “General Contractor” is the name for someone who does the same thing but commercial wise. People here get offended by calling builders, general contractors because there is a big difference. You are a laborer if you do all the physical labor. Theres a good in between if you do a lot of the finishes yourself but leave the framing and foundation to the cheap labor. No point in doing everything yourself when someone can do it faster and cheaper, and you dont lift a finger.
My Main Takeaway: I should have found and paid for higher skilled labor to complete this custom detail, who have extensive experience in completing the exact custom detail. My mistake was that I tried to complete this challenging detail as a beginner builder by asking subcontractors to try it for the first time. I set myself up for failure. Never the less, let's learn together and do better on the next one. Thanks for 100K. Road to 1 Million!
That is exactly right my man, this a $1M+ home, it’s another league in this game, you needed capo de capos for this build, I would’ve invested in higher skilled labor and have my people or I learned from them every single step so that I can use it for all my future build. You gotta pay to learn somehow. Keep it up brother love these series!
Making mistakes can feel defeating but that’s how you learn and grow! You got this!!!!
Yea high end carpenter/contractor here small biz custom work I have not done the flush base except for kitchen cabinets.But I think
Run drywall long
Scribe base
Snap line on drywall
Cut install a trim
Nail off base
Z trim*
Where do you build I can fix everything there no problem and make it perfect even with your doors you have installed
You’ve accomplished so much as a new builder. Failure builds character, strength, resilience and knowledge. Thank you for your transparency. Keep up the great work! 💪🏾
We are currently working on a new construction home in Southern California. We are doing a similar shadow reveal detail above the baseboard and around all the door jambs. I advised the builder we are working with to install the baseboard first, and then we would install the shadow bead above the finished baseboard. Another builder we worked with had another drywall contractor install the shadow bead before the baseboard, and he got the same results (uneven reveal above the baseboard). He spent thousands ripping it off and redoing this detail. I learned from his mistake. Many builders have asked me to install the shadow bead before the baseboard, and I always tell them about the story of what happened to that builder. It works every time.
You're doing great man, especially with all the custom details. Don't sweat it.
For the gap under the flush baseboard, increase your shadow gap a bit and scribe the baseboard against the floor.
Stud Pack did the same baseboards. I didn't even know that was a thing then the two Texas channel's I watch have really good detailed videos on it. NIcely done.
Great video! You never lose, you either win or you learn.
I'll be the first to admit, this is an extremely long video, and I found myself fast forward and skipping around. But PLEASE do not let that beginning statement deter or undermine what you're doing. First, bro you're YOUNG and the fact you're doing a custom build is absolutely amazing! Many kudos on that front alone! Second, thank you for sharing your experiences, especially the failures. Without failure we will never learn. If we never share those failures, how will others learn? With that said you have a bright career/future in both building and UA-cam. It speaks volumes to your work ethic and character how much all these little details matter, which in your trade, they should!
I absolutely look forward to seeing a V2 of this and how you're going to tackle things differently.
The last house I did about 5 years ago we did a flush base with ringlet, and we lasered in. We put a strip of plywood and I think we put a metal flashing on it and set sheetrock into it, then level 5 walls with veneer plaster and scribet the base to leave a 1/4" space between on polished cement floors coated with Rydax. I think we notched the top of the base to give the shadow line.
Been waiting for your content!!! Great video and transparency! Thank you for sharing your journey & knowledge!
Matt Risinger is also a good resource for these details
You’re doing well! We’re on our 4th built here in Houston and little mistakes are made here and there. I have order wrong door sizes, cabinets etc.. we just have to act quick so solve the little issues. Can’t wait to see your pool built! We want to do it at our house.
quiero empezar a construir pero no cuento con mucho capital como lo hiciste tu? saludos
Support shout out to you Case! Great vid and effort as always from your side!!
Appreciate the transparency and humbleness, great job. Man how do you find the time to do all of this, videos and crazy
busy with your business and other duties.
I am a real estate broker and agent for 35 years. I thought I knew it all but lost so much on needles things and things that had to be redone. So I feel your pain. I probably threw away $15,000 easily. I learned what not to do and there will be a next time. I was too ambitious and costs kept ticking up. Thanks for being honest and showing fails. I am sure in the end, the home will be beautiful. I think that door trim won't look like a mistake. It should look fine.
I would have installed temporary spacers full length everywhere laser leveled but leaving a small 1/4 +/- gap below to allow for out of level variations at the finished floor. Then after removing these & adding your plastic reveal strips, each and every piece of base *must* be scribed to fit. Takes a lot longer to do, but high-end contemporary details require this level of attention.
Proud of you Case. Awesome journey bro...
We have been waiting on your return!! It's been too long lol glad you are back
thanks for the transparency brotha. love the videos
I'm an architect and a builder in LA we always detail all the connections and flooring and run it with all the subs ahead of time. Modern home is a lot of detail and extra work. I failed too even as an architect when I was building my own house 4 years ago doing it
That’s great info, I learned a lot on this project and I will request the architect to draw the details in the future so all the subcontractors are on the same page.
The Progress Looking Good! 🎉🎉🎉
Great honest video! Thank you 🤗
I’m in paint prep process & just went through that same issue with doors.
Painful!
Lightpole installed today so hopefully it gets moving! Been on this build since may of this year.
Welcome back...good video...everything is a learning experience....
Yessir been waiting for another upload
Many videos coming over the next 3 weeks!
Sometimes losing is wining , I think it came out looking fantastic.
Was hoping to see a video on the Electrical rough in but overall house is coming out great!
It still looks pretty good. Love all the extra details you give us. When it comes to trimless door feature, would you chat a little about deciding against delaying the build to fix the doors before installing them or possibly outright replacing all of them?
Damm I wish I’d seen your video before. I would have guide you with the best approach and send you pictures of the trim less doors. I’ve done this many times.
Everything still looks good!
Love this contemporary look.
I know you are probably done in the garage but you should insulate the walls. It will make it much nicer in warmer or colder weather. Because maybe later down the road you might want to add a mini split. Also you could run cable on internet so you can add a tv and stereo
I still think the details still look AMAZING!!!
Thank you!
Been waiting for that pool reveal!
Nice build 🔥 linear tape & spackle diffusers would look nice in there
Amazing work, gives me the inspiration to start doing stuff around my house en optimize it.
Just wondering, how do you balance this with a family and young children? I have two and it is absurdly hard to balance this stuff.
As a high end carpenter. I would of told you day one you are going to have gaps at the bottom of trim on a polished concrete floor. those will never be perfectly level. Im not even at that part of the video. But I was wondering how you were gonna get away without shoemold without floors in. Then you answered my question. With the doors, he should of asked for your drywall finish so he could of dialed it in before fully installing the door. He should of also full finished corners with osb to help the drywall guys out, it also didnt help he didnt lazer line all temp trim around. He could of scribed to the floor if he didnt set it to high.
The Master bedroom lid is called a light well detail.
I think it came out looking great I know that ocd kicking in at this point but keep it up it will eventually come out pretty good Im sure
Flush baseboards loook great
Sure stretch caulking I would use on the doors with it beenin new home on settlement looking awesome I. Have watched you from the beginning doing good buddy for a young man .👍
The base needs to be scribed to the floor and the doors need jamb extensions. Then it can be done as intended
Where you been man? Great to see how the house is coming along. I need pool updates. 👍
So install baseboard and negative detail trim for the dry wall BEFORE the driwall?
Probs too late but saw the flush baseboard installed by sheeting the drywall as normally and then just going around and cutting the drywall from bottom with multi tool and template piece to get right height. Then installing the z channel
Smart solution 4 sure
I was just about to say this.
Looks modern to me doesn’t look super bad
Did roofing make you confident to go into go construction? Curious if inspections would be a good way to get into flipping. Assume you can do that on the side.
Watched this video to learn about recessed baseboards and didn’t learn shit. Thanks brother
Modern Contemporary homes with clean lines are the hardest to build.. You can't hide errors. It has to be perfect. Yes, you have to hire very skilled tradesmen that understand fine details. Your baseboard ledger should have been laser leveled and then scribe the baseboard to the concrete.
A decent finish carpenter could make the baseboard work with uneven floors. You'd just have to scribe the bottom of the baseboard to the floor. Pretty standard stuff, not that difficult and definitely cheaper than installing 8" baseboard over 6" :)
Agreed, since they did caulk the bottom side anyway, they should just add consistent spacer on top side and scribe the bottom side to trim.
bottom door gap going to stay the same on the very last clip?
What happened…went from initial pool build episode to a fully insulated home and installing drywall. Any reasons on going with pink insulation rather than spray foam or rockwool ?
Bruh. Ill answer all your construction questions and share my opinion on the best way to prepare for a project like that. I'm in Houston. We live and learn.
Case what's the latest on the pool?
Next time flush mount the door on one side, by installing it even with the wall. and on the inside use the same trim gap as the baseboard.
Or buy the wood and have the carpenter build you door jams you probably could have had him do it for a few hundred.
i love the flushless baseboards butg wehy is there the shadow reveal on everyones installs? just have them flush or add led lights. not adding lighting is a huge missed opportunity in all these installs ( not just yours) imo.
I think you approached the process incorrectly from the start.
1. I would suggest on the next build to use a laser to achieve straight revel line
2. If the floor is not levelled, you should have a professional finish carpenter to scribe the floor line into the baseboard.
Your only mistake was using the plywood and not a simple laser based chock line as a reference for the drywallers.
Why dont you install the drywall all the way to de floor and then the baseboard outside the drywall?
Wow finally
I think I like this better than flush door trim.
I wouldn't do the flush mount switches man that's whack to me. Doesn't even look that great.
Planning is key. Don’t remember if you said you ordered stock sized doors but you should’ve returned them to order the custom doors instead. Don’t know if you knew that most suppliers will take back stock especially if they are basic doors. That would have been my suggestion. Sure it would have set you back a bit but it’s your home not a customer’s home. As for the flooring, yeah since you used that ply material to protect your polished floors, I’m sure it screwed up the measurements. That and did the guy take the time to throw a laser level all around, did the Sheetrock crew understand the importance of keeping that bottom piece squared up? Looks and sounds like they just dropped it on the spacers and didn’t take the time to get it right. I would have and have done in the past hired a guy who would have cut the bottom of the drywall off to size off a laser level to get the straightest square possible for the best reveal. Like used 5” off cuts and then cut it square at 6.5” for the perfect 1/2 reveal all around.
Live and learn. Good job btw. I know these storms have kept us busy for sure. 👍🏼
To start don’t use pocket doors. Level 5 is not a smooth surface. It’s just the opposite. You want a inconsistent surface so your eye can’t follow a straight line. Also use a J channel on drywall returns. You could have scribed the base board to the floor. It’s very time consuming. Just because something is trending and may look good doesn’t mean it’s better.
call matt risinger, he loves young builders......
BASEBOARDS - you should have purchased 1x8 and acribbed the base to the concrete and any experienced finish carpenter could have done that. Yes it would have cost you double plus because of the extra labor scribbing the base to the floor & This Old House did the treatment you wanted in their 2005 season where they did that modern no trim around the windows and doors and the inset base trim. They brought in a special Italian (yes from Italy) plaster contractor - that modern house back in 2005 in Boston area cost at the time over 5 million that's about 8.5 million today's money. If they still had their episodes on here I'd shoot you that link but they don't
Quality, Speed, Price....the unattainable triangle. The more you get into higher end homes with deeper details is when you start to notice the sometimes hidden effects of fast paced labor.
Love your work. Got a lot of clients asking for drywall return this year so found this ironic, keep going.
Yo the drywallers are famous on TikTok 😂😂
Do your best caulk the rest
honestly, not a fan. Makes it look like low income housing or a psych ward. Ornate trim is what made homes look high class in years past. Look at castles and royal palaces in old European countries. Trim was a symbol of status and they went out of their way to make it look amazing, not try and make it unnoticeable.
It's August now, are you done yet?
Yes finished in June, just had a lot going one. All the content is coming out over the next 3 weeks!
dust catchers
12:25 How many did he miss lmao
I think you could have accomplished the baseboards correctly if you had:
1. Cut the cardboard off the floor
2. Laid out a full set of temporary baseboards resembling the EXACT shape (or the exact shape + the shadow space) of the ones you intended to put in. Not just partial boards every few feet. This would allow you to compensate everywhere that there are imperfections.
I believe it would all allow the drywallers and finishers to complete their work and do their damage to the temporary boards, and then you could just swap them out with the permanent ones.
In my head this works out -- but correct me if I'm wrong :)
Also I'd personally go with metal door frames :D
I shut the video off when he said “I’d have to get a higher skilled labor which I’m not willing to do” I should have turned it off at the all black with a backwards hat and a chain on 💀
You should hire a guy that knows how to do lil things for you to be there when you need him to work. This way you focus on other things. Just saying.
Unless you have a supper good concrete guy, those slabs are never flat, plus or minus 3/8" minimum would be a normal job with more finishers than you had.
the panel rey drywall is bad quality, the drywall base boar is easy to do it , the the house is not moder enough to do the revel architecture aluminun metal and flat base boar
Been too long !!
😢awww i have to work on my own brand new home on a sunday afternoon. poor guy. someone get him a cookie.
Bro just has money, but has no time, no patience and no good builders. In Europe we have lasers and builders is learning new things if they dont know how to do or how it works 😅
Great video! I’m going to be trying this exact detail on my new house and I know the concrete isn’t perfect. I wonder if scribing to the floor like at 3:20 in this video will work? ua-cam.com/video/dMurGIUVEtY/v-deo.html
Man it must be difficult doing what you do without knowing what your doing.. good luck to ya. I gotta say, I do build homes from scratch. I mean I actually do all of the physical building from the ground up, everything.. So when you call yourself a builder I and all other actual builders take offense .. At best your a contractor/check writer
Plenty of “builders” that “build” awesome homes without doing any of the actual manual labor .
@@kevinsanchez8872 This place is a mess. He’s trying to sell a product off of this build. It’s cheap the finish is so poor you would get better in social housing. You hire speed contractors and pay pennies you get what he got. Yes you are right it’s insulting.
A builder is the correct name for what he is. To do what he is doing at least in my state, you have to get your “home builders license”. A “General Contractor” is the name for someone who does the same thing but commercial wise. People here get offended by calling builders, general contractors because there is a big difference. You are a laborer if you do all the physical labor. Theres a good in between if you do a lot of the finishes yourself but leave the framing and foundation to the cheap labor. No point in doing everything yourself when someone can do it faster and cheaper, and you dont lift a finger.
He needs to work a little bit for a builder/contractor. He’s neither a builder or a contractor, he’s a UA-camr!
Agreed!!!!
M
Don't like it myself.. taste wise.
Way too much whining in the video
Eeek
You spent way too much time talking about other things rather the subject matter.
First haha
Love to see it!
Lucas message me
Mathieu drywall & renovation
In bc Canada .
I can help you with the shadow reveal . 👍🏼
Amazing job with this video. The transparency is commendable.
Respect 🫡