The Challenge of Trim Work

写的

我一直很喜欢使用木材和工具,尤其是剪裁,锤子和撬的工具。我的祖父灌输了我的兴趣,我的祖父是贸易的木匠。小时候,我会和他一起在车库里度过时光,看着和学习。尽管他在任何给定的项目上有效地工作,但我将与一半驱动的8和16d普通指甲一起加入两块笨拙的手锯2x4,没有真实的模式。

The Challenge of Trim Work

When my craft was completed, I would interrupt his work to show him mine. As I look back today, I realize he never commented on whether it looked good or not, he would just challenge me to measure more accurately, cut straighter, better align the materials and to finish the nail. I would pry the pieces apart and start over.

后来,长大了,结婚了,我和我的妻子to start our family in a newly built, 2-story house. We understood the difference between a custom home builder and a production home builder. We agreed that a production built home was the way for us to go. Unfortunately, we lost sight of which type of builder we were working with during the process. The finish material selection process in their showroom provided us with a number of options, and we apparently pushed the envelope with our desires. Our ideas didn't mesh with the production home builder's interests. We wanted what we thought was relatively simple, whitewood trimand whitepaneled doors. They could accommodate us, to some degree. Our idea, however, required us to add a white trim package to the build price, which included standard white laminated cabinets, white wood newels and railings, whitehollow-core flush doorsand white pressedplastic trim. We didn't want all of the woodwork white, just the trim and doors. If we were going to upgradecabinetsand install a newel and railing, we'd prefer dark stained cabinets, newel and railing, but white painted balusters. Options within options, through a production home builder, aren't an option. I inquired if I could install the wood trim myself, attempting to cut dollars from the budgeted build price and achieve our desired interior finishes. That, however, wasn't an option either, so we agreed to a base trim package, with no white wood work, and decided to do what we wanted, ourselves, after we moved in.

The lessons learned from my childhood, along with my residential framing experience and ideas developed while working for an architectural firm, were going to be put to the test in our newly built home. Saw, hammer and pry bar...check; I had all of that, in addition to other framing tools, from the days of framing homes. I found a source for the wood trim and pre-hung doors, had my eye on a sliding compound miter saw, and had a pretty good idea of my needs in terms of紧固件, sandpaper and paint. I started by removing with a pry bar all the unwanted trim, doors and frames. What I soon came to realize is that not all homes are framed as straight as the lines drawn on paper, and nothing in a house is perfectly accurate or aligned.

我开始用底漆,固体的6面板,兔子的框架,预亨门和用底漆的木质装饰架更换一楼的门。切割,平整,平方和锤击的过程相当顺利,很快。我的预算有限,恰到好处完成木材基础工作所需的适量材料,我向前推进。在下班后的晚上和周末的晚上,我的意图是在人类可能的可能立即完成工作。我首先在内角使用应付的接头。但是,它们是一个实时的杀手,所以我开始在内角和外角上使用斜角斜角关节。我对应对拐角处的结果的结果感到非常满意。虽然更容易切割,但在内部和所有外部最多使用的斜角接头。它们被切为纯45度角以形成我认为的是真正的90度角。不幸的是,外角的顶部或底部的顶部或沿着弯角的脸部有空白。 At the time,caulkwas my solution; I hadn't planned on caulk or the amount I needed. I efficiently and effectively filled the gaps and nail holes, painted, and completed the first floor work. While we lived our day to day lives, we were relatively happy with the completed work. However, the gapped joints, humps, and lack of straightness stared at me, and I realized I had something to learn when it came to running trim.

The second floor work was done in the same manner: doors, casing and base. Thedoorsupstairs presented a few anomalies from my first floor experience, but I ably worked within tightly framed openings and along a few crooked walls, without any significant modifications. Prior to starting the wood base trim, I had referred to written and web materials to determine what I could do better to eliminate the gaps and humps and create more horizontal lines. In my research, I learned about scribing with a carpenter pencil, how coped joints can hide wood expansion and contraction, and realized there are two tools I didn't have and had little or no real experience with: a hand plane and a t-bevel. The hand plane was used to ease the mitered bevel joint edges a little bit on either side, bringing both pieces tightly together at an outside corner without a gap at either the top or bottom. The t-bevel was used to determine the actual angle at inside and outside corners. This allowed me to set the miter saw to an appropriate angle, not assuming a 90 degree corner, for the actual application, which in turn allowed two pieces to fit tightly together without gaps at the corners. Scribing proved to solve humps and any lack of straightness in the corners. Scribing a pencil line along the base of the trim to match a bulge in the floor, I could remove, chisel and/or plane wood from the base to fit around the floor shape. Straightness was improved in a similar fashion when I scribed a pencil line along the end of the wood base where it butted against an un-plumb wall. This allowed a tight fit against the wall after cutting along the traced line, to match the wall's slight vertical angle.

The second floor work was an improvement over the first floor work. Having the correct tools and a better understanding of the techniques allowed for higher quality workmanship. Most importantly, I was patient, not rushing to cut, pry or fasten. It was an experience in fitting to a fine degree, not just placing two pieces adjacent to one another. I practiced, learned, repeated and grew, similar to those days in the garage with my grandfather. Our family moved from that home awhile back. I look forward to facing similar challenges and being productive around our two daughters at our new residence. Who knows, maybe one day they'll interrupt me and share with me their craft.

Jeff Calcamuggio

Jeff is an Editor-at-Large for Buildipedia.com who writes and edits Featured At Home and Knowledgebase content. Prior to joining Buildipedia, Jeff's work experience included carpentry, construction documentation, specification writing, construction administration, project management, and real estate property inspection. Jeff is a member of the Construction Specifications Institute (CSI) and an educator at Columbus State Community College and enjoys challenging DIY home improvement projects.