Modern farmhouse baseboard trim ideas; These wall trims are essential to spruce up your farmhouse and can be customized to budget and taste.
Discover charming farmhouse baseboard trim ideas to add rustic elegance to your home. Explore design tips for a cozy interior.
Modern farmhouse baseboard trim ideas; These wall trims are essential to spruce up your farmhouse and can be customized to budget and taste.
Modern farmhouse baseboard trim ideas; These wall trims are essential to spruce up your farmhouse and can be customized to budget and taste.
Modern farmhouse baseboard trim ideas; These wall trims are essential to spruce up your farmhouse and can be customized to budget and taste.
Modern farmhouse baseboard trim ideas; These wall trims are essential to spruce up your farmhouse and can be customized to budget and taste.
Modern farmhouse baseboard trim ideas; These wall trims are essential to spruce up your farmhouse and can be customized to budget and taste.
DIY box trim installation overview: considerations, tips for quick & easy installation, and baby girl nursery inspiration.
My entryway finally feels complete and welcoming! Sharing my favorite ways to decorate your entryway with runners, console tables, and decor.
Sage-green has taken the interior design world by storm and that is why sage-toned kitchens and homes are here to stay!
Discover charming farmhouse baseboard trim ideas to add rustic elegance to your home. Explore design tips for a cozy interior.
Riverside Millwork Group can complete your home with exquisite finishing touches; trim, moulding, and ceilings. Get a quote!
Ditch the sea of white and add a darker color to your baseboards, trim and millwork with one of these beautiful contrast trim ideas.
Even though it seem like a small detail, your baseboard styles can distinctively give a whole new look to your room. Here is the guide.
Get inspired by the best modern baseboard ideas to add a touch of sophistication and style to your home's interior design.
Using wood trim for an easy and inexpensive way to update any room that even a novice DIYer can do.
Your quick guide to baseboards is right here! Read now so you can choose the best basboards size and style for your home!
Baseboard Cheating {architecture} Easy Baseboard Hack: This baseboard 'face lift' is so easy and inexpensive to do, anyone can do it! Add architecture to your room with baseboards, but here's an idea to help you cheat! This money-saving DIY baseboard cheat is from Donna with Funky Junk Interiors. Gorgeous, thick baseboards don't have to be pricey and intricate! Use unique materials to get the look you like. How to build easy baseboards which Donna calls cheater baseboards. CLICK THIS LINK to be taken to the full tutorial for this baseboard hack over on Donna's blog. It's so brilliant. She also gives
I recently shared with you our newly updated Laundry room. And I am loving it. Still a few things to get finished in there like a window treatment and some fun basket labels and such. One of the updates we made was to make our existing baseboards taller. Today I am going to share with
Some updates on our 3rd floor renovation: we've added wainscoting and window trim! Let me show you some pictures and tell you how we did it... We measured the entire hallway, and brainstormed over the correct proportions... Then, I drew the proposed plan in AutoCAD. image illustrating the wainscoting at the stair landing Then, we gathered our materials. Materials: first and foremost, you will need a miter saw and a table saw (we bought this and this). Other supplies include a trim nail gun (we used this one), construction adhesive, a level, tape measure, and a whole lot of THINKING. As you can imagine, this job required a lot of math and common sense. :) But honestly, if you're committed, anyone can DIY this type of project. We ordered the majority of our poplar wood paneling from a local craftsman/friend. The rest of the trim came from the Home Depot. Wood delivery! Lots of poplar 1" x 4" and 1" x 6" pieces. Getting started: we marked where each stud was located. We applied 3-ply sheeting against the newly installed drywall (they are sold in 4' x 8' sizes, so we had ours cut to size). This will be the foundation for the flat-panel wainscot (nail it into the studs and use construction adhesive to apply it against the wall). Then, we added a new baseboard on the upper landing (see where the new meets the old stained oak baseboard at the top of the stairs). In this photo, we had already added the lower horizontal panel above the baseboard. The sheeting is up, as well as the new baseboards (we could not save the original baseboards in the this hallway). The original door trim has been re-applied. We had to cut a small opening in our newly drywalled ceiling to access the attic fan (I didn't want to do it here, and suggested every possible alternative, but it had to be done). The original attic opening can be seen here. We made the new access point smaller and centered on the middle door. Vertical pieces are going up! Belly shot. :) Being 7 months pregnant, I'm more of a "helper/gopher" on this job. I watch Dave work, hand him any necessary tools, bring him water, run to Home Depot for supplies, and discuss the design details ad nauseum. I think he really likes working with me. All the paneling has been applied... Progress shot of the stairway... More progress-- the baseboard cap piece has been installed, and we've framed each inset panel with 3/4" trim. The trim on the inset dresses it up a bit and adds a lot of additional interest. Close up picture of the inset trim, as it was being applied. Love that simple scallop. Looking down towards the floor: once applied, the entire wall treatment projects about an inch from the wall. Now, we need to add a chair rail! Will this work? We decided that we needed something a bit chunkier... Perfect. This will be our chair rail combination. And, here it is installed! Close up detail of the new chair rail combination. Dave, sanding everything smooth. :) We still have a lot of prep work to do before we can prime and paint (we need to fill nail holes, caulk, etc) But, that's the progress so far! We are SO BEYOND THRILLED WITH THE RESULT. Like, can't even describe how happy. Once the wainscoting was up, we needed to complete the window trim. The 3rd floor is the only floor of our home with NEW windows. The originals could not be saved up here (after years of neglect and serious rot), so we had them replaced with solid wood windows in the same style of the original. We applied the new window trim this weekend, and I am LOVING the way it turned out. this window looks over the backyard-- you can see a bit of the carriage house through the window. That's the progress so far! Next on the list: repaint and hang the original trim that we so carefully saved (minus the shoe molding) install molding around the windows paint molding around the windows paint and hang the new closet doors strip the paint from the original doors, sand, and stain to the natural wood install wainscoting up the stairwell, onto the landing paint newly installed wainscoting refinish the hardwood floors install shoe moulding final coat of "James White" on the walls ...