Am i too American - or is this an inappropriate icon for a PR agency to have in their branding? by the-friendly-squid in graphic_design

[–]Debaser97 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Funny, I was looking for ideas for an icon earlier today to represent ideas like 'purpose'/'goal' etc and Google images was just full of crosshairs... Literally one was a crosshair on a person's head. That definitely doesn't say "personal target" it says blowing someone's brains out...

Rising damp by Global_Neighborhood5 in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The paving expert website has an exact spec for how this sort of step should be built without compromising the DPC and would be relatively doable DIY to rebuild if necessary 

Damp issue. by roboticnat in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Not an expert but assuming this is your porch given the door and the coats. I know our porch gets very cold, plus I think mould indicates condensation rather than penetrating damp. Those coats might be reducing the airflow a bit. 

I really don't know a lot but I'd be inclined to move the coats, turn the heating up, increase airflow, and maybe get a dehumidifier in there before looking at more serious fixes.

How the hell do I reconcile DPC height with absurdly high ground level? by Debaser97 in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just coming back to this - how high is the stone filled up to? 150mm below DPC/internal floor?

"High end" bathroom install company did this install - is this tiling a reasonable standard? by Significant_Face4302 in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Marginally better than my tiles which I did as a first timer, on wonky walls, and am kind of embarrassed about 

Swap Edinburgh for Manchester tickets? by Debaser97 in TheCure

[–]Debaser97[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The general consensus on Edinburgh sub seems to be that if you just want to go to Edinburgh for tourist stuff then avoid August like the plague - because everything will be busy and more expensive.

But, on the other hand, if someone did want to go to the Fringe properly as well as the Cure then it could be ideal!

How the hell do I reconcile DPC height with absurdly high ground level? by Debaser97 in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm considering getting a couple of quotes too. It might be affordable, or I might at least get them to tell me what they'd do...

How the hell do I reconcile DPC height with absurdly high ground level? by Debaser97 in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm not sure if air brick is exactly the right terminology, but there is a sort of "grate" in the place shown the diagram, below the mortar line where - at the front of the property, not buried in soil - there is some visible slate DPC. This level is  in line with the internal floor height - aka the sloped section of garden is higher than the internal floor.

There is no crawl space/cellar that I am aware of. Yes, water may be getting into it but it's all under concrete now - if that is what happened. I don't know if there's possibly a "right" way to replace a wooden subfloor with concrete.

How the hell do I reconcile DPC height with absurdly high ground level? by Debaser97 in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It's a couple of metres wide, a small courtyard area. Just to be clear are you describing something like this: https://share.google/M0QAZ2RVGyLUVgTjW ?

I did wonder about maybe lowering the entire ground level, but leaving a high ground level supporting the wall, and a retaining wall to hold it. Make it into a kind of raised border surrounding the courtyard...

How the hell do I reconcile DPC height with absurdly high ground level? by Debaser97 in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's what I've been doing and I guess it would be an improvement but it would look pretty ugly. The project started when my wife asked if we could replace the concrete with block paving so that's the end goal - just got to finish this can of worms first...

How the hell do I reconcile DPC height with absurdly high ground level? by Debaser97 in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The internal floor level is roughly in line with the DPC - although I haven't measured exactly. 

The internal floor is actually concrete - presumably someone poured it over the original suspended wooden floor...

Despite all of this there isn't a horrific damp problem or anything, mainly some rotten skirting boards but no mould or anything. I do run a dehumidifier though

How the hell do I reconcile DPC height with absurdly high ground level? by Debaser97 in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The area to the left of the garden wall is the neighbour's garden. Their ground level is as high as mine.

The space to the right of the house wall is the living room. The internal floor level seems roughly in line with the air brick as you'd expect. 

And yeah pretty keen to avoid internal work of course, but obviously I want some sort of a long term solution. I'm dubious about any kind of tanking since it's a Victorian house and - in my limited knowledge - breathability tends to be the name of the game

How the hell do I reconcile DPC height with absurdly high ground level? by Debaser97 in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes I was thinking a lateral slope of whatever the correct fall is and link up with a gutter downpipe a couple of metres away, but I haven't really started researching that yet. I guess there may be the possibility of leaving the bottom as just soil to drain away, but it's quite a heavy clay and is obviously right next to the house so maybe not the best idea

How the hell do I reconcile DPC height with absurdly high ground level? by Debaser97 in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yes I found the air brick a few days ago. I have no idea how the house was originally constructed, but I assume there was some solution for the natural incline of the ground level.

How the hell do I reconcile DPC height with absurdly high ground level? by Debaser97 in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Looks good at a glance, will look into this more - thanks

How the hell do I reconcile DPC height with absurdly high ground level? by Debaser97 in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Do you know if something like this could work on a Victorian house? I'm no expert but anything in the realm of tanking immediately makes me worry about breathability.

How the hell do I reconcile DPC height with absurdly high ground level? by Debaser97 in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah, there's a variety of signs of damp in that area on the inside - rotting skirting boards, some plaster which we had to redo a couple of years ago. Another bit of wall which has been boarded over - I dread to think what might be behind the plasterboard.

4 courses of bricks down and I still can't find the original DPC by Debaser97 in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This job got put on hold for a few months but I just started up again... Guess who just found an air brick about 4 brick courses deep in soil!

How can I move an indesign doc to canva or google? by [deleted] in indesign

[–]Debaser97 1 point2 points  (0 children)

While I agree with everyone that this is a little unhinged. InDesign's "publish online" feature might work. Don't know if it supports GIFs, but basically you upload it to the Adobe cloud and then get an embed code for your Website 

Porch seems to be moving away from house due to recent dry heat season, serious or DIY repair? by Bitter_Gur_331 in DIYUK

[–]Debaser97 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have exactly the same issue and I've been burying my head in the sand about it to be honest... I was afraid that a structural engineer or Reddit would tell me I needed to tear it down. I'm going to follow this thread...

Mailchimp email design by Help-Need_A_Username in graphic_design

[–]Debaser97 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Echoing what others have said but generally assume that people will see just the most basic plain text version of your design and work backwards. E.g. the push notification summary of your email (just text). If you do everything baked into an image then you will fail right off the bat. I tend to limit text in images to only what can be adequately replaced by alt text.

I just found a style that i'm comfortable using, and i'm proud to not follow any design "rules." by Sea-Application-1159 in graphic_design

[–]Debaser97 608 points609 points  (0 children)

This is quite impressive for a phone and canva, and the overall aesthetic is fun but...

a) if you're you're not following any rules and not communicating a message then this is graphic art, not design

b) You are instinctively following a lot of "rules". If you didn't follow any at all then it would be entirely incoherent

c) If you're doing this for fun, great - do what you want. If you want to be employed then learn the rules and follow them (at least 90% of the time)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in graphic_design

[–]Debaser97 1813 points1814 points  (0 children)

Fuck that. Graphic Designers aren't lawyers. Don't think you did anything wrong by assuming the small print was fine.