Saltbox roofs look like a patched gable style roof with two sides sloping outwards from a central ridge.
Saltbox slanted roof.
Shed gable hip gambrel and mansard.
A gable roof has the same pitch on each side as well as the same length.
Salt cellars can be either lidded or open and are found in a wide range of sizes from large shared vessels to small individual dishes.
A salt cellar also called a salt salt box and a salt pig is an article of tableware for holding and dispensing salt in british english the term is normally used for what in north american english are called salt shakers.
Their attractiveness traces to the desire to make a two story building function as a one story building to reduce the tax bill.
Roof framing is one of those carpenter skills that appears quite complicated and indeed some roof designs are difficult.
The earliest saltbox homes were created by simply adding a lean to addition to the rear of the original house.
Named for the shape of the container salt once came in these homes have a sloped roof that extends farther down on one side.
Regardless of the period however saltbox houses were generally built to expand living space for families and help them weather new england s harsh climate.
The large expanse of such a roof will cause.
They arose from the need for more room.
The saltbox takes its name from a popular wooden box used to store salt in colonial times.
Roofs are basically five types.
Early saltbox house examples from the 17th century are often additions.
Later builds were constructed with the sloped roof and additional living space included from the start.
However instead of sloping to the same length one side reaches all the way to the first.
A gable roof is probably the most versatile type of shed roof and the most common as it can handle any type of pitch.
A salt box roof is asymmetrical in design with one side being more of slightly sloping flat roof and the other more of a lean to with gables at each end.
A lean to is also versatile but features only one roof.
Homes in this slanted shape have dated back to 1650 colonial new england.
Both the house and the wooden box share the same gable roof shape.
It s also said that the tax on two story homes.
Another common design in the northeast is the saltbox which is a gable roof with one longer side.
A saltbox shed is a gable that extends further incorporating a covered porch on the front or back.
The workhorse of colonial america the familiar saltbox is a building that features a long pitched roof on one side similar to the lid on a salt storage box.