Pair of Salvaged 2.6 Metre Sandstone Pillars or Columns
View details
A selection of Reclaimed Period Newel Posts
View details
Ref: W701-1087
Pair Of Salvaged 1930s Cast Iron Ogle Sons Elevator Cable Pulleys
£120.00 the pairQty: 1 pairPair Of Salvaged 1930s Cast Iron Ogle Sons Elevator Cable Pulleys
View details
Ref: W701-1082
A pair of Reclaimed Red Cast Iron Brackets or Spindle / Axle Mounts
£385.00 the pairQty: 1 pairA pair of Reclaimed Red Cast Iron Brackets or Spindle / Axle Mounts
View details
Ref: RHYL75MMBRICK
Authentic Cleaned Reclaimed 19th Century Handmade 3” Bricks
Authentic Cleaned Reclaimed 19th Century Handmade 3” Bricks
View details
Original Set of Six Dennis Ruabon Large Vented Chimney Pots
View details
Ref: W701-1036
Reclaimed Assorted Hand Carved Stone Drain Covers / Surrounds
£50.00 fromQty: 7 assortedReclaimed Assorted Hand Carved Stone Drain Covers / Surrounds
View details
Ref: BRICK-RECMULTIRED
Authentic Reclaimed Handmade Hereford or Tudor Style Soft-Red Bricks
£1.32 eachQty:temp. out of stockAuthentic Reclaimed Handmade Hereford or Tudor Style Soft-Red Bricks
View details
Building materials in the medieval era consisted of naturally occurring products local to the build. With few proper roads it was expensive to transport heavy stone and felled trees over large distances. Turf, water reed, straw or wood shingles were used for roofing, straw and mud for cob walls, and timber for doorways and wind-holes (later known as windows) which contained no glass but were draped in oil soaked linen.
With better housing came the skills to build them. Carpenters built houses from oak and elm beams and planks whilst stonemasons dressed walling stone, flagstones, stone steps and stone mullion windows. As the population grew, the need to build quicker and cheaper saw the rise of standardised and mass produced materials such as brick, roof slates and sheet glass. With these came the trades including bricklayers, carpenters and roofers.
As domestic life modernised new trades appeared such as glaziers, electricians, plasterers, plumbers and painters and decorators. With the advent of the 21st century comes a realisation of the wealth of this cultural heritage and a move to appreciate, conserve and save the building materials, skills and architecture that shaped the history of this nation and its people.