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Baseboard to door casing transition

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35K views 24 replies 15 participants last post by  pappagor  
#1 ·
Hello - New to this site -

As a painter, I have done couple of trim work. Currently, I have a client that wants me to re-trim his 2 bedroom condo. They want 1x4 used as the baseboard and 1x2 for casing.

The issue: both of them are 5/8 thickness. I recommended that we find a 1x4 with 1/2 width, which would be the correct way. However they are insisting that I use the same width for a smooth transition.

A. Does anyone have a recommendation/tips for this kind of installation? I see the use of wood clay and sanding if the width is going to be the same.

Thanks....
 
#2 ·
Do you want a smooth transition, or do they? i've worked with casing and baseboard that are the same thickness lots of times. we just butt it up to the casing, even if it's all flat profile.

But if you really want them to tie in together, i would just glue where they meet, then fill and do lots of sanding until there's no noticeable transition
 
#4 ·
Thanks! They want the smooth transition. The carpenter I used to work for all ways told me to make sure the base is a little thinner the casing so the casing has a little lip and that was the right way of doing it.

This is the first square trim that I have ever done, so I'm thinking of butting it against the casting, fill the little crack with clay, sand it and paint it.
 
#14 ·
In most cases it is nice to put a base block, it will make a nice transition and you don't have to worry about being to deep or not being flush. It will eliminate extra labor like you said, caulking and filling, sanding,etc if they don't match up perfectly, not to mention it will look like s^*t if they don't, even with sanding and filling.
Try explain this to the HO and make a sense out of it, they might change theirs mind, was in a few similar situations and they were happy with the outcome.
 
#21 ·
TBFGhost said:
Maybe some of the R.O.s for the doors you set are large, but mine are typically only 2" larger. 2'8" for a 2'6" door. It leave around a 1/4" shim space. 1 1/2" casing would cover just fine.

Here is the job I was referring to...

http://s1324.photobucket.com/user/Punchlist_Carpentry/media/1913/12101212303_zpsea02884a.jpg.html

We came back about a year later to replace those corner guards, replace all the painted door in the hall with clear finish maple as well as new base/shoe/casing down the hall.

That picture is not 1" by 2" casing.

Show me a picture of your 1" by 2" casing.

1" by 2" would never work for me. My jambs are almost 1-1/2" thick plus I'd have to take a sick day just looking at it.
 
#22 ·
That picture is not 1" by 2" casing.

Show me a picture of your 1" by 2" casing.

1" by 2" would never work for me. My jambs are almost 1-1/2" thick plus I'd have to take a sick day just looking at it.
That is the 1x4 from I talked about before and those are some mighty heavy jambs you got. I use 3/4 stock, 1/4 shim space. Leaves 5/8 covering the rock when you use a 1/8 reveal. I could see one by two looking fine in a very minimal house.