The top piece has the grain running vertically unlike how must sticks of wood would be. Closely examine the chipped places. Does it look like a different type of wood or maybe particle board under the chip?
[img]https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.doityourselft.com-vbulletin/2000x1504/image_e7cd5db109ca233434f48e359476707303c5afc0.jpg[/img]
I just finished remodeling my bathroom. All that is left is that corner in the photo. It needs a piece of 1/4 round from the ceiling down, a piece on the left side of the vanity by the wall to the corner and a piece on the back side to the corner. You can see the piece I am using in the photos.
I have watched videos and looked at photos and cut some pieces but can’t get it right.
any videos, photos, wording to help me understand how to cut these pieces is greatly appreciated.
my wife is yelling at me to get it finished. 😱
thanks.
I'm planning to put up some picture rail in our little entryway (roughly 4'x10'). [url=https://abihomeservices.com/picture-rail-molding/]Similar to the pictures here.[/url]. There used to be picture rail throughout the apartment, but we removed it during a previous renovation and thought it would be nice to install some again in a couple places. The problem is the entryway ceiling is super wavy and not level. At its lowest point at the wall, the ceiling dips down about 7/8" lower than the highest point.
As I remember, the old molding left about a 1/4" gap at the ceiling and I think more or less followed the uneven ceiling. That sort of goes against my inclinations, but installing the picture rail level and leaving a 1/4" gap at the ceiling's lowest point means it would have a 1-1/8" gap elsewhere--not great. What would you do? I could sort of split the difference or move the molding down a little so the variance isn't as noticeable. Our ceilings are about 8'-8". I could leave 3 or 4 inch gap instead (but keep it level).
One thing I know I won't be doing is leveling the ceiling or doing any plaster work to fix it. Any ideas?