To get the corners, we referred tothis video from This Old House. In the video, they use straight cuts like ours above then an angled cut, which they cope, on just one side. To make their cuts, they angle the molding on the saw as if it was sitting against the wall and ceiling a...
It shows you how to cut both the left and right side, for inside and outside corners: You'll want to mark your measurements on the back of your crown, not the front, because all of your cuts will be made from the back of the molding. This is nice because you don't mark up th...
Corner blacks are found in the ornamental molding section of home-improvement websites. They range from 2 1/2″ to 4″ square and, used in the corners of the frame, they avoid the tricky issue of 45-degree miter joints. Corner blocks are a little difficult to search for online soread ...
Inside Corners: Coping with Pain or Mitre and Run Inside corners are the most common in a home. Most regular rooms have four inside corners. There are two ways to cut molding for inside corners: coping and 45/45 mitres. Let’s start with the easier of the two: 45/45 mitres. Method...