Installing Floor Baseboards
An adventurous homeowner can learn to cut and install baseboards for their own home making them a perfect diy project.
Installing floor baseboards. If your baseboards have been glued to the wall and would cause damage if you tried to remove them it may be best to leave them. The most common baseboard corner is an inside 90 degree corner and the easiest way to install baseboards to fit this corner is to cut two pieces of the baseboard at the edges and at an angle so. When you re installing baseboards over vinyl wood or plastic laminate floors the best way to handle gaps between the drywall and the flooring is to shim the gap with narrow blocks of 1 2 in wood. Scrap plywood are ideal.
The final piece is the base shoe. It too is flexible and disguises gaps between the floor and the underside of the baseboard. Any wood will work but chunks of 1 2 in. Baseboards were often three piece affairs consisting of a flat plank a decorative cap molding and a rounded shoe molding to cover gaps along the floor.
Baseboard moulding is a simple way to add instant character to a room. A homeowner can easily learn how to install baseboards with this easy to follow project guide. Hold a scrap piece of baseboard molding perpendicular to the face down board and trace the profile of the baseboard with a pencil. Cut the blocks and tuck them into the gap every few feet.
This will give you a reference point to make it easier to complete the coped joint. Next lay the other baseboard molding that will join the one already in place face down on the floor. The process is similar to installing crown moulding. In old houses you often see the fanciest baseboard in the front room downstairs says this old house general contractor tom silva.
Baseboards cover the joints between the walls and the floor and add an essential finishing touch to a room. To allow for seasonal movement of a wooden floor the base shoe is nailed at a slight downward angle into the baseboard not the floor with finishing nails.