
If you have arches or some other shape that is going to give you some difficulty during installation, I highly suggest you draw your shingles out on graph paper. If you are a professional installer, you can probably wing it. But having this on paper kept me from getting seriously messed up. I actually got out of order on my first two rows between my arches and I thought I’d never get back on track. I ended up 2 inches off and all of the sudden every seam started coming out on top of another seam. This brings up an important tip: start on one end and move across. The reason I got messed up is because I wasn’t sure how to come down from the top of an arch. Your shingles must overlap and it is easiest to start at the bottom and work up your arch. But to get to the other side, you have to go down. I tried to measure over and then work up. This is where I found myself 2 inches off near the top so I had to start ripping off a few shingles and make a few custom sizes. But after doing the first arch, I figured out how to do it. However, I still relied heavily on my graph paper drawing to see what shingle went under what.
(Caution: always follow the manufacturer’s instructions and best safety practices.)
Next time: estimating and making the shingles
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