Chicken.And used those fluted casing with rosettes around doors and window n sech...so you don't have to miter all those, too.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Chicken.And used those fluted casing with rosettes around doors and window n sech...so you don't have to miter all those, too.
No, the trick is to hire a professional. He'll have a good sliding mitre box that allows him to cut the outside corners flat on the saw and he'll know that you cope inside corners![]()
Chicken.
So you don't know anything about the subject. Thanks for sharing all that knowledge with us.....
Watch this...it's not hard. People make it difficult. It isn't.
I've done some pretty ridiculous crown moldings over the years, but unless it's a small molding or a small room it was always a 2 man job. Multi-piece crowns can be a bitch, but you can cut all the pieces for one run at the same time if you know what you're doingHa, you should see the 16" crown I did in the living room. 5 different off-the-shelf moldings were put together to make that - and it was a bitch 19' off the floor. I had to climb up and down the scaffold for most of the cuts. That said, it was stupid. Had I just glued a big, ornate foam crown up there, nobody would have known the difference....don't know what I was thinking.
Piece of cake!That's the only way to do that, right? I can't imagine there's another way - the angle would never be correct.
The only time cutting a crown is a hassle is when you have a 16' piece and have to put it on the saw right with one hand and chop it with the other....gets a little squirrely.
Yeah, you put them all together first and then chop 'em. Still, I didn't have a saw big enough to cut that on an angle. So, I cut a lot of it by hand with a scroll saw. Plus, it was so stiff that any wall imperfections caused problems.I've done some pretty ridiculous crown moldings over the years, but unless it's a small molding or a small room it was always a 2 man job. Multi-piece crowns can be a bitch, but you can cut all the pieces for one run at the same time if you know what you're doing![]()
That's the only way to do that, right? I can't imagine there's another way - the angle would never be correct.
The only time cutting a crown is a hassle is when you have a 16' piece and have to put it on the saw right with one hand and chop it with the other....gets a little squirrely.
Yeah, you put them all together first and then chop 'em. Still, I didn't have a saw big enough to cut that on an angle. So, I cut a lot of it by hand with a scroll saw. Plus, it was so stiff that any wall imperfections caused problems.
...and try like hell to keep that little flat edge against the saw box with one hand while choppin' it!Just put a ladder on the overhang end...... let that end be supported by a rung.
Work it Yo!...and try like hell to keep that little flat edge against the saw box with one hand while choppin' it!
I have a dewalt mitre box stand with sliding extensions at both ends and I still have run into situations where I've used a step ladder just like you did.Just put a ladder on the overhang end...... let that end be supported by a rung.
The little finishing nail is still sticking out of that last corner....from when I tacked it up before using the nail gun. I never yanked it out and it's too much of a PITA to go back up and get it. The damned drunk painter left it there and painted over it.No, I wouldn't do it like that. I would just do all the pieces on one wall and then take the measurements for the next wall and head for the cutting station. Gotta remember, if you're coping the inside corners like you're supposed to you have a little bit to play with as one wall overlaps the other. The really tricky shit is when you get to the last wall and you have to cope both ends,
Like I said earlier, if you have a good sliding compound miter saw you can cut the material flat on the table....and try like hell to keep that little flat edge against the saw box with one hand while choppin' it!
I'll send you a nail set for XmasThe little finishing nail is still sticking out of that last corner....from when I tacked it up before using the nail gun. I never yanked it out and it's too much of a PITA to go back up and get it. The damned drunk painter left it there and painted over it.
Yeah, I know. But I was told compound miters are only for the gays. Real men do it the hard way and then complain about it later.Like I said earlier, if you have a good sliding compound miter saw you can cut the material flat on the table.
Thanks for your contribution to the thread. Your input will be invaluable to OP when he decides to take on this project.Like I said earlier, if you have a good sliding compound miter saw you can cut the material flat on the table.
Yeah, not quite. Compound mitre saws are for professionals, simple chop saws are good enough for Joe Homeowner since they don't know what the hell they are doing anyways.Yeah, I know. But I was told compound miters are only for the gays. Real men do it the hard way and then complain about it later.