Before a contractor begins working on a major home improvement project, he (or she) will generally draw up a blueprint of the project's plan - depending on how difficult the job is. For example, hanging drywall wouldn't need an extensive blueprint but a project as large adding on an extra room or building a garage would. As you've probably already guessed, building something like a garage requires clearly defined measurements and that's one of the key elements that a blueprint provides: exact measurements. What makes a blueprint foreign to most of us is the whole design of it. After all, a blueprint looks nothing like the finished product. In fact, it looks rather bizarre - filled with thin lines, numbers, and tiny type. But this cryptic form of art, otherwise known View the rest of this article
Saturday, August 11, 2007
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