Check Out Our New Video!
We now have our new Diamond Certified video! They did a great job and we are excited to be able to share it with you all! Enjoy!
Hope you have a great Memorial Day Weekend!
Sincerely,
Roofmax
www.roofmax.net
We now have our new Diamond Certified video! They did a great job and we are excited to be able to share it with you all! Enjoy!
Hope you have a great Memorial Day Weekend!
Sincerely,
Roofmax
www.roofmax.net
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDUCtTUKwEI#watch-main-area
This is a great video done for out Diamond Certified profile. Hope you enjoy it!
Roofmax employees held their annual yearly meeting at Marie Callender’s last Friday. It was a great meal! Good pie! But, far more exciting was looking back at 2009′s triumphs, challenges, firsts, and growth. We have set new goals and are determined to continue to bring you the best service possible. We are so grateful for our past customers and are excited to help and work with new people this year. Roofmax is committed to being the best roofing contractor, best at roof repairs, and best solar installer in the industry. New customers, new products, and new technologies, here’s to a great 2010 to you and to Roofmax!
Tara Thornock
By: Jeanne Huber, This Old House magazine
This Old House painter John Dee calls his neighbors Robert and Andrea Bowler “the epitome of diligent homeowners.” They bought their postwar Colonial in May two years ago, and a month later Andrea was down at the local hardware store, picking out new beige paint to lighten up the gloomy exterior. Soon Robert was up on the ladder, hard at work. “It wasn’t easy,” he says. “I scraped the whole house, rented a water gun, primed everything. I put two coats of paint over that. I did it when I got home from work, I did it on Saturdays. It took me the whole summer. It looked so good.”
But within a year, as the Bowlers watched in horror, their labor-intensive paint job — and everything underneath — was flaking off in leathery sheets. The paint detached with such determination that some chips were embedded with cedar splinters from the underlying siding. Layers of paint that had bonded to the house for decades came loose.
To read the complete article visit:
http://www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/article/0,,212675,00.html
Recent Comments