I plan to pull up carpeting and expose HW floors, and at the same time
replace my baseboards. I also want to redo the stairway end-cap (I believe
there is a proper name for it, but I don't know what it is).
These are a photos of how they did it back in '61. The baseboard is just
cut at a 45 against the vertical quarter-round, and filled in with caulk.
It
looks kinda hokey in my opinion.
Any suggestions on how to build the end-cap and marry it to new baseboards?
I have air nailers and a miter saw, so I can get pretty fancy. I am just
short of ideas. I'll either do oak or painted pine, whatever anyone thinks
looks better.
Thanks.
http://jcman.hostingisfree.com/p1010148.jpg
http://jcman.hostingisfree.com/p1010147.jpg
Buck Turgidson wrote:
> I plan to pull up carpeting and expose HW floors, and at the same time
> replace my baseboards. I also want to redo the stairway end-cap (I believe
> there is a proper name for it, but I don't know what it is).
>
> These are a photos of how they did it back in '61. The baseboard is just
> cut at a 45 against the vertical quarter-round, and filled in with caulk.
> It
> looks kinda hokey in my opinion.
>
> Any suggestions on how to build the end-cap and marry it to new baseboards?
> I have air nailers and a miter saw, so I can get pretty fancy. I am just
> short of ideas. I'll either do oak or painted pine, whatever anyone thinks
> looks better.
>
> Thanks.
>
>
>
> http://jcman.hostingisfree.com/p1010148.jpg
>
>
>
> http://jcman.hostingisfree.com/p1010147.jpg
I don't have a picture for you but here's what I did in a similar
situation
removed the 1/4 round from the top of the skirt board
ran base moulding around the corner to the stairs
split the angle and mitered the base molding at the skirt board
ran base molding along the top of the skirt board to meet the miter
This significantly raises your 'molding' along the stairs but gives a
cleaner look when done. You can also rip the bottom of the base
molding at an angle so that the base molding on top of the skirt board
can be lower than what runs around the room.
> I don't have a picture for you but here's what I did in a similar
> situation
>
> removed the 1/4 round from the top of the skirt board
> ran base moulding around the corner to the stairs
> split the angle and mitered the base molding at the skirt board
> ran base molding along the top of the skirt board to meet the miter
>
> This significantly raises your 'molding' along the stairs but gives a
> cleaner look when done. You can also rip the bottom of the base
> molding at an angle so that the base molding on top of the skirt board
> can be lower than what runs around the room.
>
Thanks. I was thinking of exactly that. The only thing that bothers me is
that there is not a gradual transition from the skirt board to the base
molding. It is kind of abrupt, going from a 1 by to the base molding.
Maybe I could install a new skirt and chamfer the edges a little bit with a
router.