- Remove any existing fascia boards Remove the fascia boards and the old felt if you’re re-felting.
- Measure the shed roof Measure the roof, taking into account that you should leave around 50mm for overlaps at the eaves and 75mm at the gable ends. You’ll probably need 3 pieces of felt, but some smaller sheds only need 2.
- Apply felt to the roof Once you’ve cut the felt to size, apply the each piece to the roof, pulling it tight. Then nail along the length of the roof at 100mm intervals. For nails at the bottom edge, they can be wider – around 300mm. If you’re adding a piece of felt in the middle of the shed along the apex, fix it using adhesive, then nail it at the lower edge at 50mm intervals.
- Tidy up the overhangs Fold down the felt at each overhang and nail it securely. Cut a slit in the overhang at the apex using a pen knife, then fold that down and nail at 100mm intervals along the gable. If you like, you can add fascia boards to keep the shed looking neat. Use wood nails to secure them and then trim away any excess felt.
Fordingbridge
Fordingbridge is a community and wider civil parish with a population of 6,000 on the River Avon in the New Forest District of Hampshire, England, close to the Dorset as well as Wiltshire borders and also on the edge of the New Forest, with gallery as well as a late middle ages 7-arch bridge. It is 81 miles (130 kilometres) southwest of London, as well as 10 miles (16 kilometres) south of the city of Salisbury. Fordingbridge is a former market community. The Avon Valley Path passes through the town. The town excluding direct negotiation Sandleheath (consisted of in its headline population with other peripheral homes, totalling 1,526 citizens) has a density of 30.2 persons per hectare. Fordingbridge is a community and also civil parish in Hampshire on the financial institutions of the River Avon. The very first Great Bridge, from which the community got its present name, was built in mediaeval times, and is upstream from the ford. The bridge is a major attribute of the community with its seven elegant arcs, which can be seen very easily from the town's big waterfront park where one can walk along the shore curtained with willows as well as waterside plants. Close by is a children's backyard, private memorial gardens, parks and sporting activities playing fields. A bronze sculpture of the painter Augustus John stands on the financial institutions of the Avon near the Great Bridge.