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- Cascading 15-foot waterfalls; luxury grottos and swim up bars are nothing for the Pool Kings. Follow along as they create over the top award-winning dream pools for their clients. From your own custom lake to a show-stopping backyard water park, the sky is the limit when the Pool Kings are on the job.
- For home restoration expert Tamara Day, there's no such thing as a home that's too big. This Kansas City native and mother of four specializes in restoring the neglected large homes that others are too scared to take on. She brings these big beauties back to life so that new families can move in and love them again.
- Nicole Curtis is saving historic houses, one broken-down fireplace at a time. Working in Detroit and Minneapolis, Nicole takes ramshackle homes from the wrecking ball to their original stunning glory. Whether it's managing her rugged crew or wrangling city officials, this single mom wields her hammer with skill and returns condemned properties to their place as the pride of the neighborhood.
- After his girlfriend, Lisa, moves in, Mike Holmes Jr. enlists the help of his dad, Mike Holmes, to give his modest bachelor bungalow a facelift. Lisa soon finds herself "between a rock and a hard place" as the two Holmes work together on the reno.
- Organization specialist Kraig Bantle and the crew from Garage Brothers, a family business based in Raleigh, N.C., offer to clean up garages, basements and attics that are out of control. Kraig and his team clear the clutter and repurpose the spaces into rooms that homeowners can enjoy. The catch? The crew takes any valuables they find and resells them, hoping to turn a profit.
- This ain't your Grandma's knitting show! Knitty Gritty, a new how-to series for the DIY Network, presents fun and fabulous ideas for creative knitters, from beginners to advanced. The series debuts this July on DIY and is hosted by Vickie Howell - a young, hip crafter with a passion for knitting. In each episode, knitting experts will join Vickie as she takes viewers through projects such as baby "Ugg" boots, a groovy guitar strap, and even a bag knit from recycled plastic grocery bags. Since knitting is such a popular social activity, "knitsters" also join Vickie in the episodes and tackle the featured project. More than just informational, this fun and creative series will appeal to knitters across the board.
- Barnwood Builders' Mark Bowe is heading to the heartland to work side by side with some of the best craftsman in America. From old world blacksmiths to roofers, joiners and glaziers, he'll get the ultimate education working as an apprentice to the best of the best. And when you're rehabbing buildings nearly two centuries old, the tools of the trade are unlike anything you've ever seen.
- Three hip young female hosts show homeowners how to completely transform their homes using nothing but fabric (and a touch of paint when necessary). DIY's "seam team" is made up of an interior designer Cat Wei, upholsterer Kelly Keener and seamstress April Eden. Instead of emptying each room and starting from scratch, the Material Girls work with the elements that are already in the room. Using only fabric, scissors, staples, needles, thread and help from the homeowners, they will turn the room into a redecorated masterpiece.
- From The Rachel and fanny packs to Beanie Babies and dancing the Macarena, the 1990s had plenty of questionable fads. The home was no exception, as owners went wild with faux finishes, inflatable furniture, shabby chic, armoires, stencil painting and more. With the help of design pros and pop-culture experts, we're opening the HGTV and DIY archives to tackle the worst trends from the '90s and see if we can answer the question: "What were we thinking?"
- That's So '80s is a clip-driven ride through the good, bad and ugly design trends of the decade of decadence. A panel of pop culture experts has plenty to say about design faux pas, like pastel colors, carpeted bathrooms, waterbeds, glass blocks and sponge painting.
- What can you do to your bathroom with just a few days to work and some elbow grease? More than you can imagine. DIY Network expert Matt Muenster shows you the possibilities in the series BATHtastic! In each episode you'll learn about cutting-edge new materials, amazing design tips and essential DIY know-how that will revitalize any bathroom, great or small. It's one of your favorite and most widely used rooms in the house, so treat your bathroom to a quick upgrade to take it from bath to BATHtastic!
- Documentary film Ääniä maan alta (Sounds from the underground) tells the musical history of TVO, a legendary music club in Turku, Finland. Starting from the era of jazz jam session of the 1960's and ending to the modern experimental and alternative music scene that include hardcore punk, metal, hip-hop and noise.
- Listen up! Hosted by tech expert Corey Greenberg, this DIY Workshop offers the step-by-step planning and construction of a unique, high-tech personal home theater. Our experts explore the digital landscape with in-depth explanations of digital television choices, options for programming delivery, acoustic and engineering considerations that impact a home theater design, and much more! Home Theater Workshop makes your home theater experience sound just right!
- The HGTV Smart Home 2018 is nestled in the tall grasses of the low country in South Carolina and we're taking you from start to finish as we build the smartest, most efficient home we've ever given away. With Jeff Devlin handling the build and Tiffany Brooks focusing on design, this home will surprise, entertain and make life a little easier. One lucky person will win it all -- this incredible home, everything in it, the new Mercedes-Benz GLC 350e Plug-In Hybrid and $100,000 from national mortgage lender Quicken Loans. It's a grand prize package worth over $1.6 million.
- Two city detectives are sent to a small idyllic town in North Carolina called 'Silver Creek Falls" to investigate a strange series of events that the local sheriff can't seem to get his mind around. What initially seems like an open-and-shut case unfolds into a truly terrifying mystery that will leave the detectives wondering what is real and what isn't.
- After the infamous "Silver Creek Falls" case is forcibly closed by the Norfolk Police Commissioner, Detective Sara Fitzgerald transfers to a small town in her home state of Massachusetts. What seems to be a new and peaceful life for our protagonist is soon turned upside down when a double homicide occurs in a nearby nature reserve.
- Guest Kathy Cano-Murillo explains the meaning of Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) and how this traditional Mexican holiday is celebrated. Kathy explains the importance of having an altar to honor the dead and demonstrates how to make one out of a decorated cigar box, embellished with candles, photos, and other mementos. Kathy whips up a felt banner, some white-chocolate sugar skulls, and folds up tissue paper into festive flowers.
- Guest Kathy Cano Murillo turns a plain old TV tray and silverware drawer into a colorful table collage featuring a splash of Latin art and culture. Next, Kathy takes an unadorned lamp and camps it up rumba-girl style using fruit and lots of glitz. Then, Kathy takes brightly colored crepe paper and fashions it into a lush topiary guaranteed to brighten up any fiesta.
- After years of clearing and construction, Rene and Kelly are finally ready to put in a pool that completes their beautiful, 20-acre San Antonio property. Tony and Paul are confident the couple will love the huge natural waterfall, stacked-stone spa and spacious baja shelf they have designed. Finding a way to tie the stunning new pool in with the existing beloved backyard pond is going to be a challenge, though.
- A young couple looks to build an off-the-grid geodesic dome, cooled using geothermal caves, with a view of Tennessee's South Cumberland Mountain Range. But they're up against uncertain weather, an intricate design and treacherous mountain paths.
- Brett tackles a historic 1887 Victorian home built in Altadena, California, by Andrew McNally of Rand McNally publishing fame. In 1897 a Turkish Room was added to the home with materials from the Turkish Building at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. To retain the home's grandeur, Brett relocates the kitchen and entryway. Then, he tackles the main bedroom and bath, which have lost their original style.
- The Barnwood Builders travel to Walton, WV, to save the barn that inspired Mark Bowe to start his business 25 years ago. The guys find some fun treasures, Sherman makes a special gift and Alex visits a workshop that makes some of the finest pipe organs.
- The Barnwood Builders teach two young apprentices how to build a timber frame barn in Weston, West Virginia. Mark Bowe explores the finished 4-H cabin at Jackson's Mill, and Mark Battle checks out a finished mountain top retreat in New Market, Virginia.
- The Barnwood Builders restore a timber frame home on a frozen field in West Virginia. Mark and Johnny visit an extraordinary mountain top retreat with a log home and timber frame pool house, and Alex Webb builds a lord's table and bench at his workshop.
- A New York couple with a passion for snowboarding begins building a smart timber frame cabin in remote Vermont. Troubles soon begin when the home's instructions lead to confusion, making this dream nearly impossible to finish before the harsh winter hits.
- In the hills of Alabama, the Barnwood Builders take on their most-complicated build ever to create a monster-sized wedding pavilion dreamed up by designer Karen Tillery. It's the perfect marriage of wood and steel. Mark Bowe hews out a log the old fashioned way with a hand made broad ax.
- A Missouri couple is cleaning up and building out their inherited property, but troubles multiply as hurricane rains flood the build site, a gigantic burn pile creates larger flames than expected and the materials that actually do arrive are broken.
- A couple looks to bring the shores of Key West to their donkey sanctuary in Missouri; despite having experience with building off-grid properties, they face new challenges as they attempt to construct a double container home deep in the woods.
- A family of three in the North Georgia mountains are building a unique, geodesic dome home at the top of their property. After endless rainstorms, their build site becomes nearly inaccessible and they question if their forever home will ever be completed.
- An outdoor enthusiast works to build his dream retirement home in the Idaho mountains, but weather and material shortages slow his time-line. As things get back on track, he receives devastating news that brings his build to a grinding halt.
- It's Yard Crashers largest yard yet. This huge yard goes from a bare and broken down blank slate to a pristine park. A soccer field gives the kids a place to play while a beautiful paver patio with shade structure above creates a hangout hub for adults. Host and licensed landscape contractor Ahmed Hassan creates a patio area which sports a one of a kind "aqua grill" with a water feature on one side and a BBQ on the other. A fire pit and matching benches add another entertaining area for the entire family to enjoy.
- Homeowners Chris and Dolores Holman take host John DeSilvia on a tour of their recent renovations, all by an unqualified contractor who did the work entirely too quickly and completely incorrectly. Immediately, John notices that there are cracks forming around the opening the contractor made when knocking down a wall. Inspecting a leak in the upstairs crawlspace, he discovers that the shingles were not installed properly either. John DeSilvia wastes no time starting demolition in search of the reasons for the cracking and sagging interior of the home. The family is at risk until they get to the bottom of this, and John DeSilivia makes sure their home is structurally sound.
- Perhaps the only thing better than a hilltop Los Angeles home with panoramic views of the valley is a sumptuous party room that offers up some gorgeous sightseeing of its own. Josh Temple and his team will turn a salt water aquarium into a unique wet bar backed with custom wenge shelves, build a floor to ceiling 3-D fire feature skinned in Calcutta porcelain slab, fabricate a streamlined coffee table, install rich, durable laminate floors, then glam it all up with sofas, chairs, wall unit and an oversized tri-globe chandelier studded with cut crystal dangles.
- Mark and the guys travel to Abingdon, Virginia, to take down a farmhouse that Mark bought sight unseen. The house is really a 200 year-old log cabin covered by layers of siding and overgrowth. As they strip away each layer, the news gets better. They salvage the incredible hand-hewn timbers underneath.
- The guys travel to The Show Me State, to take down and rebuild a historic 170-year-old cabin. Sherman leads the guys in converting this cabin into a guest house for kindred spirit client, Mark Perry. Meanwhile Mark drums up business west of the Mississippi. The guys work in weather extremes to turn the cabin's frown upside down.
- Mark and the guys travel to Jane Lew, West Virginia, to salvage the wood from a 120-year old cattle barn that is slated or demolition. The site is so wet they have to build their own road just to get to the barn. The rare, wide plank boards get a new life in a nearby home.
- 2013– 40mTV-GTV EpisodeThe Barnwood Builders volunteer to help Boy Scout troop 248 build a new lodge out of their old lodge. Mark and the guys have a lot to teach these boys about the pioneer life. And the boys' determination gives the Barnwood Builders something in return; hope for the future.
- 2013– 40mTV-GTV EpisodeMark and the guys explore a perfect pioneer settlement complete with wood, water, and stone. They save the classic log cabin and repurpose the rare hand-cut sandstone chimney. Sherman helps local stonemasons turn the chimney into a fire pit grill.
- Mark and the guys have to build their own road to reach a cabin that has been overgrown for 11 years! Rose Riggs never got to finish her dream cabin, but Mark will make sure it gets a new life. He salvages some of the wood to make an incredible rose inlaid table for Rose's daughter.
- 2013– 40mTV-GTV EpisodeThe Barnwood Builders work with one of their most passionate and knowledgeable clients yet. Together, they build a huge double pen log cabin on a platform 13 feet off the ground. This will be the master suite on a high-end vacation rental. Mark builds the outside. Karen designs the interior.
- 2013– 40mTV-GTV EpisodeMark and the guys make a rare trip north to dismantle an enormous, 200-year old barn. This New England Style barn is unlike any one they have ever taken down. The barn is so big it takes extra hands to get the barnwood down, and a crane to lift out the valuable beams.
- Mark and the guys rebuild a log cabin that has been in the Brown family since 1856. They use original logs from the cabin, old logs from a nearby barn, and new logs from a local saw mill. They team up with a local crew called, 'The Good Ole Boys,' to turn all these logs into a home that will last for generations to come.
- 2013– 40mTV-GTV EpisodeMark and the guys save a log cabin from an old Virginia tobacco farm and to turn it into a tasting room for a local distillery. Their client takes the opportunity to go to "Barnwood School." He works alongside Mark and the guys so he can pass these skills on to others.
- 2013– 40mTV-GTV EpisodeMark and the guys go way beyond the call of duty to save the last cabin from the old town of Roanoke, West Virginia. The Fox Sisters show up to watch their father's boyhood home get moved to a local four-diamond resort. And when the job is complete, the community comes out in full force to celebrate the new cabin.
- Mark and the guys save the logs from a fire-damaged home in West Virginia. Mark promises the family who sold him the cabin that he will honor their history here. He calls it Grandma's Cabin. Once the logs are salvaged, the Barnwood Builders rebuild Grandma's Cabin on the Boneyard for a client in Montana.
- Mark and the guys build a massive, and very complicated, log home high in the Blue Ridge Mountains. To make this unique design work, they create an entirely new kind of notch. They work with a local team of craftsmen to pull off this high-stakes build.
- The team brings an Appalachian-style cabin all the way to western Colorado. At the Canyon of the Ancients Ranch, they explore the stacked stone ruins of the ancestral Puebloans and also leave behind a legacy of their own. Before they leave, they also rebuild the Virginia spring house which will support a living roof.
- Mark and the guys use over 100 antique logs from two tobacco barns to build a dramatic entrance for their client's property. The drive-through double corn crib requires a whole lot of teamwork, and involves some of the trickiest notching they've ever done.
- The guys are finding creative uses for all of their leftovers! Every time they take a cabin down, they end up with extra inventory. Using spare small beams, they'll build a pavilion and sell their scraps as upcycled products.
- The Barnwood Builders pull into New Ringgold, Pennsylvania, in a covered wagon, ready to take down and move a very complicated carriage house. They find all sorts of treasures in the 150-year-old pioneer garage before they carefully strip it, lift the roof off in sections and disassemble the beams.