Beaver Tail Tiles

Author: Daisy

Jul. 08, 2024

Beaver Tail Tiles

 

Beaver tail tiles. Fish scale shingles in all metals for roof and wall.

Called fish scale shingles, dragon scale shingles, mermaid tiles&#;these beautiful shingles for roof and wall go by many names. We call them beaver tail tiles as per their traditional European designation. Noted for their dimension, this system has a round base which lends a very iconic installed appearance. And though this system is historic in design, while tiles or wood shakes make for a very specific geographical flair, beaver tail tiles in metal span architectural period styles and regionalisms making them supremely versatile. Beaver tail tiles for roof are appropriate for pitches of 4:12 and above and can be made to accommodate any weather environments. Specify where the project will be located, and we&#;ll build the system to suit that project&#;s specific needs to fulfill the beauty, permanence and maintenance-free systems we promise all our clients. Beaver tail shingles come in any metal you wish! Brass, zinc, stainless steel copper&#; you name it! This gives you limitless design options. These would be amazing applied to everything from a museum of modern art to a cozy fairy tale style cabin in the woods. Beaver tail tiles in metal are otherwise very difficult to find. The rarity will set off your project and leave everyone asking where you found these. Don&#;t let worries of how to plan or install these shingles stymie your decision. Plan with confidence! Count on us to help you plan how to apply and install Beaver Tail Tiles to any building, no matter how complex. We look forward to hearing from you! Click the following hyperlink to download the installation instructions for Beaver Tail Tile: 

Are you interested in learning more about fish scale roof tiles? Contact us today to secure an expert consultation!

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Contact us to discuss your requirements of what are the advantages and disadvantages of a metal roof. Our experienced sales team can help you identify the options that best suit your needs.

Called fish scale shingles, dragon scale shingles, mermaid tiles&#;these beautiful shingles for roof and wall go by many names. We call them beaver tail tiles as per their traditional European designation. Noted for their dimension, this system has a round base which lends a very iconic installed appearance. And though this system is historic in design, while tiles or wood shakes make for a very specific geographical flair, beaver tail tiles in metal span architectural period styles and regionalisms making them supremely versatile. Beaver tail tiles for roof are appropriate for pitches of 4:12 and above and can be made to accommodate any weather environments. Specify where the project will be located, and we&#;ll build the system to suit that project&#;s specific needs to fulfill the beauty, permanence and maintenance-free systems we promise all our clients.Beaver tail shingles come in any metal you wish! Brass, zinc, stainless steel copper&#; you name it! This gives you limitless design options. These would be amazing applied to everything from a museum of modern art to a cozy fairy tale style cabin in the woods. Beaver tail tiles in metal are otherwise very difficult to find. The rarity will set off your project and leave everyone asking where you found these. Don&#;t let worries of how to plan or install these shingles stymie your decision. Plan with confidence! Count on us to help you plan how to apply and install Beaver Tail Tiles to any building, no matter how complex. We look forward to hearing from you! Click the following hyperlink to download the installation instructions for Beaver Tail Tile: Beaver tail tile 6 inch 801-462-Learn more about our Iridescent shingles here: https://spenglerindustries.com/news/mermaid-metal-tiles-for-roof-and-wall/

Imbrication


Excerpt
Shingle Pattern for Queen Anne Houses
By Demetra Aposporos
Old-House Journal, May-June
(online Nov. )

Excerpt(online Nov. )

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One of the hallmarks of the Victorian era was a desire to be noticed. It&#;s a theme that repeated itself on every aspect of home furnishings of the day. Furniture was dripping in ornament, hardware was intricately incised, and buildings were adorned with every manner of attention-grabbing detail - from gingerbread trim to stained glass windows to seductively turned porch rails. Even exterior walls vied for attention through rows of patterned shingles, a technique with the funny- and formal-sounding name imbrication.

Victorian architects managed to use common cedar shingles to wildly decorative effect. These architects took simple pieces of wood - albeit ones handsomely cut across their butt ends - and placed them in rows to form distinctive patterns that managed to draw the eyes of observers as effectively as a wolf-whistle turns heads on a crowded street.

The patterns could be simple, like a single band of fancy shingles running three or four deep around the middle of a house, which is known as a belt course. Or they could be much more elaborate, with row upon row of shingles of different shapes and styles stacked one atop the other, top to bottom, much like a queen wearing dazzling crown jewels on her way to a royal ball.

Some shingles were fancier than others, although all of these decorative shingles are referred to today as &#;fancy cuts.&#; Back in the day, the simplest shingle designs might be square- or diagonal-cut across the bottom. But even these plain-Jane cuts could make dramatic statements across a house, especially when paired together in alternating rows. Mixing two rows of square-cuts with one row of diagonals created a shadow-box effect, heightened as the sun moved across the sky throughout the day. Paint those shingles different colors, and suddenly walls came to life in the pointy petals of a black-eyed Susan or a sunflower.

And those were just the simple patterns. On complicated, architect-designed high-style houses, it was possible to find five or six rows of different shingle designs. Shingles ending in diamonds or arrows were set atop round- or fish-scale cuts. Half coves were arranged in a line above square-cut shingles, their cutouts matched at the seams to form half-circles. A gable might be decked out in shingles with ends cut to resemble puzzle pieces, looking like something you&#;d find in a crumpled heap in the corner of a child&#;s room. The possibilities were endless.

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