Yes, it was a while ago, we talked about rounded corners, did anyone else try this, besides me? Now the shadows and baseboards remain, so it might be appropriate to let others think about how to do it? Is there a shadow molding in rubber?


My first spontaneous thought is to make it easy on yourself and take a square block that you round off at the corner, so that the corner towards the ceiling is square and therefore easier to list. But it doesn’t feel like a satisfying solution, probably looks odd. You seem to have quite a small radius, so bending a pine mold around the corner seems advanced. But maybe it's possible.
Try making tight cuts on the inside of the molding with a fine-toothed saw to remove some material on the inside of the bend.
Amateur suggestion from me, surely someone skilled in interior carpentry will come up with a sensible answer...
Try making tight cuts on the inside of the molding with a fine-toothed saw to remove some material on the inside of the bend.
Amateur suggestion from me, surely someone skilled in interior carpentry will come up with a sensible answer...
It is possible but takes a while. Such things are almost standard on boat interiors but are priced accordingly.
In short, you make just the corner by itself with quite a few adjustments, milling if possible, and if you have similar profiles. Here you actually get to play with your own creativity, which helps enormously.
I think some people are starting to understand that templates are an absolute must here and that you gladly make jigs for everything *S*
Didn’t mean to be unkind, but I can't give much more advice without knowing more about the tool setup, knowledge, etc.
/Kent
In short, you make just the corner by itself with quite a few adjustments, milling if possible, and if you have similar profiles. Here you actually get to play with your own creativity, which helps enormously.
I think some people are starting to understand that templates are an absolute must here and that you gladly make jigs for everything *S*
Didn’t mean to be unkind, but I can't give much more advice without knowing more about the tool setup, knowledge, etc.
/Kent
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But more practically, good cut/sawing and splitting the trim and a bit of latex.
If you want it without latex, be more precise.
In the previous answer, I started from a corner in one piece.
Best regards,
Kent
If you want it without latex, be more precise.
In the previous answer, I started from a corner in one piece.
Best regards,
Kent
Member
· Västernorrland
· 2 106 posts
A skugglist should be able to bend:
http://www.byggahus.se/forum/moebelsnickeri/78303-boeja-trae.html
http://www.skogssverige.se/fragaom/detail.cfm?Id=6765
http://www.byggahus.se/forum/moebelsnickeri/78303-boeja-trae.html
http://www.skogssverige.se/fragaom/detail.cfm?Id=6765
Thanks for the input, I hadn't counted on any advanced method for this small job, it's about 4 corners. That's why I jokingly wondered if there were any shadow strips in rubber, but maybe some semi-finished product can be found. Many strips are available in plastic, but I haven't seen shadow strips. I have no knowledge of bending a regular shadow strip, it's a relatively small radius, plus the ceiling is 10 degrees. It might be inclined to glue together thin strips, or why not a strip of plaster.
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