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  2. How to Pick the Right Siding for Your Home - AOL

    www.aol.com/pick-siding-home-170500522.html

    Here’s everything you need to know about the top 11 types of exterior house siding, including appearance, cost, maintenance, and more pros and cons from experts

  3. Clapboard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clapboard

    These boards eventually go grey as the tannins are washed out from the wood. More recently clapboard has been tarred or painted—traditionally black or white due to locally occurring minerals or pigments. In modern clapboard these colors remain popular, but with a hugely wider variety due to chemical pigments and stains.

  4. Siding (construction) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siding_(construction)

    Highly decorative wood-shingle siding on a house in Clatskanie, Oregon, U.S. Siding or wall cladding is the protective material attached to the exterior side of a wall of a house or other building. Along with the roof, it forms the first line of defense against the elements, most importantly sun, rain/snow, heat and cold, thus creating a stable ...

  5. Lustron house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lustron_house

    The houses sold for between $8,500 and $9,500, according to a March 1949 article in the Columbus Dispatch—about 25 percent less than comparable conventional housing. By November 1949, however, a Lustron's average selling price had come up to $10,500. Most of the known Lustron houses were constructed in 36 of the United States, including Alaska.

  6. Vinyl siding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinyl_siding

    Vinyl siding on a building. Vinyl siding is plastic exterior siding for houses and small apartment buildings, used for decoration and weatherproofing, imitating wood clapboard, batten board and batten or shakes, and used instead of other materials such as aluminum or fiber cement siding.

  7. Shiplap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shiplap

    Shiplap is either rough-sawn 25 mm (1 in) or milled 19 mm (3 ⁄ 4 in) pine or similarly inexpensive wood between 76 and 254 mm (3 and 10 in) wide with a 9.5–12.7 mm (3 ⁄ 8 – 1 ⁄ 2 in) rabbet on opposite sides of each edge. [1] The rabbet allows the boards to overlap in this area.

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