@@ColtonCrumpDIY I have a question - if u buy a house with 10,000 sq ft and two floors , is the square footage 5000 sq ft for each floor ? Or is it just the land ?
Learnings here could be applied to everything in life. Break it down into sections and next thing you know, a big project is done. Haha thanks for watching!
Great question. So this is one of those times in life when the formulas taught in 4th grade actually apply. Say it's a half circle you need to find the area. 1. Measure the widest part from edge to edge = diameter 2. Take that number in inches, divide by 2 = radius 3. Multiply by pie (3.14) and square the radius. (ie πr²) 4. That's the entire circle area, so if you have a half circle divide that by 2. Now you have the area in inches that you need. If you need it in feet then divide 12. Let me know if this helps! :)
I know everyone is saying your a great teacher and no doubt I’m just slow but what are you doing by dividing by 12 and multiplying as well as the percentages
You're good haha there is a lot here. So I'm measuring in inches and I want to know square first of flooring that I need. So I take a measurement, say width first, in inches, divide that by 12 (because 12 inches = 1 ft) then that gives me the feet of that measurement. Then because I'm measuring squares and rectangles, I measure the length in inches, divide by 12 get the feet. Now I have 2 measurements in feet. W and L. Multiply those together and I got my square footage. That help?
So I'm measuring everything by inches on my measuring tape. It's a direct read on the measuring tape. Then I divide by 12 because I need to convert to feet. 12 inches = 1 foot. That help?
@@LauraRodriguez-pr7es you divide by 144 when you already multiplied square-inch of your space and you need to convert to square footage. For example, 10 ft x 10ft = 100 ft^2. But you measure 120 inches per side of the room. You can either 1) 120 inches / 12 in = 10 ft. Do this again for the other side. Then multiply to get 100 ft^2. Or 2) 120 inches times 120 inches = 14400 inches^2. Then you divide by 144, which equals 100 sqft^2. Hope this makes sense.
You should be adding at least 10% to all orders, to allow for replacement tiles. I didn't think this thru until we had a hurricane and the tile was discontinued by the manufacturer. Would have been a-lot cheaper to have stored extra tile in my attic.
Oooohhhh I shoulda paid more attention in highschool... I worked with my dad doing tile work for years, but only cut measurements were my headache. Now im trying to do my floor of my own place and.. I dunno how!😭🤣😂🤣
You got this!! Feel free to pause and rewatch as I do go through the content quickly. Best advice I can give you as you're trying to figure this out, is visualize it, try to imagine your cut and how it fits before you cut. Measure twice, cut once. If you mess up, you may need another box of flooring depending on how much you mess up but the more you do it, the easier it gets. Best of luck and let me know if you have any questions!
I had a local contractor come to my house to give me an estimate for flooring. he was done in 10 minutes as he measured the entire length of my house by the entire width of my house and told me I had a 1200 ft² house added a hundred feet of flooring for 10% basically and told me the price would be $5,800 that includes materials. after he left I painstakingly measured out the entire floor plan including all the closets all the rooms using rectangles just like you did every time that I was short of a foot I rounded it to the next highest foot on every measurement I took and I came up with 964 ft² added 10% for 1060.?? that equates to about $3,700 at $3.49 a square foot claimed price by this guy. Well you guessed it his measurement of the whole house footprint was 1,144 plus 100 square feet for 10% he said I had a get 1300 ft² of flooring for a price of $5,800. Am I really allowing myself to get ripped off for almost $2,000??? What should I do What should I say to him I've already paid him for the floor it's scheduled to be done on the 5th of May. I'm kind of pissed and want my money back cuz he's charging me for every square foot of every wall in the house including the bathtub and shower footprints. is this the way some people do it and get away with it so they can give a lower price on the square footage than other people?
Yeah so that's the issue with contractors. Everyone one of them run their business differently. There isn't a standard (outside of structure codes, electrical or plumbing codes. Etc) that they are held to when it comes to bidding. I may be a little too hyper focused and understand that people are trying to make money for their business, but your exactly right, he measured out an area assuming it's an open area without any obstacles around it. I always measure out the exact flooring I need (around walls, making those squares and adding them all up) and buffer by adding 10% for cutting waste. When I first started to DIY flooring, I started with 15% buffer for waste. In the end, you said you paid the contractor and is scheduled. I'm not in a place to financially advise you on what to do as I don't know any agreements or contracts signed. But if you don't feel comfortable about it, I don't see any harm in having a conversation about trying to get your money back and looking at other contractors.
If you're measuring in inches and you want square feet you need to: - L in inches / 12 to get to ft - W in inches / 12 to get to ft L in ft x W in ft = sq ft
Why does this not work for me? Ugh I promise I was decent in math what am I doing wrong? Just the kitchen alone is double the sqft as my entire house ugh
Scott dang we are known to do that. Make everything harder than it needs to be. Good job seeing that I was Asian. Hopefully you caught it before the video was done.
Thank you but no thank you. this guy needs to stay in a office some where 1st he talks way to fast for any video,to many little measurements just box off all your measurements. Make it simple. his voice is very annoying omg this 3 min video felt like 30 min. 🤷🤦♂️
At least I have an office job with an education and do this on the side with knowledge of knowing when to capitalize words in sentences, when to use "a" vs "an", and know the difference between to and too. OH! Almost forgot about punctuation too, my bad.
Personally, I found it very helpful for my small space. There is nothing foolish about this and it is precisely what I needed. As an aside, there is more to it than just figuring out the square footage of a room, particularly when you have many angles to work with, which I do.
I would have so pass high school geometry with flying colors had he taught it. So simple and concise, my teacher made it like calligraphy
Had*
😆😆 sorry I wasn't your high school geometry teacher! But hey, thanks for watching and commenting 🤙
This is just so amazing. It’s hard to find tutorials that are so concise and to the point, and still make the instructions perfectly clear.
Oo thank you Reds Silk! Appreciate you saying that. It's the whole reason why I started making TH-cam videos in the first place. Thanks for watching!!
@@ColtonCrumpDIY I have a question - if u buy a house with 10,000 sq ft and two floors , is the square footage 5000 sq ft for each floor ? Or is it just the land ?
Thanks, Colton! It’s my first apartment and we really wanna make the patio look nice. Now, with your help, I can make the first stride!
You are welcome! Hopefully it turns out for you! Thanks for watching
YEEESSSSSSSSSS!!!! I just love TH-cam for this kind of info!!! Just what I needed today!!! Clear and concise!! Thank you sooooo much!! ❤️👊👊👊❤️
Awesome!! Glad I could help a little! Best of luck and thanks for watching and commenting!
@@ColtonCrumpDIY You’re so welcome. I also subscribed. Thanks again for the info!!
Thank you!!!! 😃
@@ColtonCrumpDIY You’re so welcome … now back to measuring. 😂
Brother that's too much math!😆 thank you though!
Hahaha
Thanks Colton Crump. Now I got the right angle on the project.
Ha good I'm so glad! Now you can measure anyone's house.
This makes my life way easier
Learnings here could be applied to everything in life. Break it down into sections and next thing you know, a big project is done. Haha thanks for watching!
What if you have an area thats a circle or semi circle how do you do that
Great question. So this is one of those times in life when the formulas taught in 4th grade actually apply. Say it's a half circle you need to find the area.
1. Measure the widest part from edge to edge = diameter
2. Take that number in inches, divide by 2 = radius
3. Multiply by pie (3.14) and square the radius. (ie πr²)
4. That's the entire circle area, so if you have a half circle divide that by 2. Now you have the area in inches that you need. If you need it in feet then divide 12.
Let me know if this helps! :)
This really helped thank you
You're welcome! Thanks for watching and commenting!
I know everyone is saying your a great teacher and no doubt I’m just slow but what are you doing by dividing by 12 and multiplying as well as the percentages
You're good haha there is a lot here.
So I'm measuring in inches and I want to know square first of flooring that I need. So I take a measurement, say width first, in inches, divide that by 12 (because 12 inches = 1 ft) then that gives me the feet of that measurement. Then because I'm measuring squares and rectangles, I measure the length in inches, divide by 12 get the feet.
Now I have 2 measurements in feet. W and L. Multiply those together and I got my square footage.
That help?
This dude goes fast
Yeah sorry! I try to pump out everything for you in short videos. Pause it if you need or let me know if you have any questions!
Smh 🤦 very annoying
Why did you divide it by 12? I’m kinda confused here cuz some other people says that you have to divide it by 144? What would be the difference ?
So I'm measuring everything by inches on my measuring tape. It's a direct read on the measuring tape. Then I divide by 12 because I need to convert to feet. 12 inches = 1 foot.
That help?
@@LauraRodriguez-pr7es you divide by 144 when you already multiplied square-inch of your space and you need to convert to square footage. For example, 10 ft x 10ft = 100 ft^2. But you measure 120 inches per side of the room. You can either 1) 120 inches / 12 in = 10 ft. Do this again for the other side. Then multiply to get 100 ft^2. Or 2) 120 inches times 120 inches = 14400 inches^2. Then you divide by 144, which equals 100 sqft^2. Hope this makes sense.
Great! Thank you!
Thank you!
I appreciate this video
Thanks Rene! I appreciate you watching and commenting!
Great vid
Thank you! 😊
You should be adding at least 10% to all orders, to allow for replacement tiles. I didn't think this thru until we had a hurricane and the tile was discontinued by the manufacturer. Would have been a-lot cheaper to have stored extra tile in my attic.
Oooohhhh I shoulda paid more attention in highschool... I worked with my dad doing tile work for years, but only cut measurements were my headache. Now im trying to do my floor of my own place and.. I dunno how!😭🤣😂🤣
Gonna have to rewatch this a few times...
You got this!! Feel free to pause and rewatch as I do go through the content quickly. Best advice I can give you as you're trying to figure this out, is visualize it, try to imagine your cut and how it fits before you cut. Measure twice, cut once. If you mess up, you may need another box of flooring depending on how much you mess up but the more you do it, the easier it gets. Best of luck and let me know if you have any questions!
Thank you buddy
You're welcome buddy! Thanks for watching! Hope your family is doing well!
You make it so complicated, 😇
Thank you!!!!!!!!!!
You're welcome!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I had a local contractor come to my house to give me an estimate for flooring. he was done in 10 minutes as he measured the entire length of my house by the entire width of my house and told me I had a 1200 ft² house added a hundred feet of flooring for 10% basically and told me the price would be $5,800 that includes materials. after he left I painstakingly measured out the entire floor plan including all the closets all the rooms using rectangles just like you did every time that I was short of a foot I rounded it to the next highest foot on every measurement I took and I came up with 964 ft² added 10% for 1060.??
that equates to about $3,700 at $3.49 a square foot claimed price by this guy.
Well you guessed it his measurement of the whole house footprint was 1,144 plus 100 square feet for 10% he said I had a get 1300 ft² of flooring for a price of $5,800. Am I really allowing myself to get ripped off for almost $2,000??? What should I do What should I say to him I've already paid him for the floor it's scheduled to be done on the 5th of May. I'm kind of pissed and want my money back cuz he's charging me for every square foot of every wall in the house including the bathtub and shower footprints. is this the way some people do it and get away with it so they can give a lower price on the square footage than other people?
Yeah so that's the issue with contractors. Everyone one of them run their business differently. There isn't a standard (outside of structure codes, electrical or plumbing codes. Etc) that they are held to when it comes to bidding. I may be a little too hyper focused and understand that people are trying to make money for their business, but your exactly right, he measured out an area assuming it's an open area without any obstacles around it. I always measure out the exact flooring I need (around walls, making those squares and adding them all up) and buffer by adding 10% for cutting waste. When I first started to DIY flooring, I started with 15% buffer for waste. In the end, you said you paid the contractor and is scheduled. I'm not in a place to financially advise you on what to do as I don't know any agreements or contracts signed. But if you don't feel comfortable about it, I don't see any harm in having a conversation about trying to get your money back and looking at other contractors.
didnt really understand it all moved to fast, but squares l*w=v so v=sqft?
If you're measuring in inches and you want square feet you need to:
- L in inches / 12 to get to ft
- W in inches / 12 to get to ft
L in ft x W in ft = sq ft
Thx
Yw
Why does this not work for me? Ugh I promise I was decent in math what am I doing wrong? Just the kitchen alone is double the sqft as my entire house ugh
Are you measuring in inches and then dividing by 12 before doing any multiplying?
Divide inches by 144 to get the sq feet
Not 12
I see where you're getting the 144. But I took each inches measurement, divided by 12, then times those two together
I knew he was asian. He made that way harder than it had to be
Scott dang we are known to do that. Make everything harder than it needs to be. Good job seeing that I was Asian. Hopefully you caught it before the video was done.
Thank you but no thank you. this guy needs to stay in a office some where 1st he talks way to fast for any video,to many little measurements just box off all your measurements. Make it simple. his voice is very annoying omg this 3 min video felt like 30 min. 🤷🤦♂️
At least I have an office job with an education and do this on the side with knowledge of knowing when to capitalize words in sentences, when to use "a" vs "an", and know the difference between to and too. OH! Almost forgot about punctuation too, my bad.
Man this is foolish of u to make all that explanation to calculate one little room..Just multiply With time Lenght and thata all.....u too extra
Personally, I found it very helpful for my small space. There is nothing foolish about this and it is precisely what I needed. As an aside, there is more to it than just figuring out the square footage of a room, particularly when you have many angles to work with, which I do.
Love it!
@@clairebeane3455 theres nothing wrong with knowing how to do it multiple ways
@@nocryers1173 I’m pretty sure I didn’t say that there was. 🙄
I'm dizzy. Math was never my strong suit....🫤
Sorry! Haha simplest summary: if you're measuring in inches, convert to feet. Multiply length x width.
This complicated!!!!