Deep skirting boards

Joined
11 Jan 2013
Messages
6,909
Reaction score
1,636
Location
Durham
Country
United Kingdom
Question for the experienced. Part way through the House of Pain- looking at skirting board for the first 3 completed rooms. Ceiling height pretty much requires 6" or 7" but the price of 7" is fairly horrid (£4- odd/metre). Given I've got at least 150 metres to put in, is it worth me spanking £80 (on a no name 1/2" router), £50 on the router bit for the profile I want and making my own skirting from 170 x 20 PSE (at about £2/metre). Or will I quickly lose the will to live?
Ta
 
Sponsored Links
From my experience I'd buy pre primed MDF skirting in that size. I've done this in a few rooms and it's very stable, pine skirting has had a tendancy to warp creating a concave profile which makes it harder to fix and it pulls away from the wall at the top marginally.
 
From my experience I'd buy pre primed MDF skirting in that size. I've done this in a few rooms and it's very stable, pine skirting has had a tendancy to warp creating a concave profile which makes it harder to fix and it pulls away from the wall at the top marginally.
Ta for that, trouble is I'm an old hippy and rather like the bare wood look (well stained down a bit and then Ronsealed to death). And yes I've had fun in the past with warped skirting but I'd rather stick pins in my eyes than pay what's being asked for MDF!
 
You could use plain board for the lower part of the profile, and a cheaper panel moulding for the top? That's how skirting used to be made. I made my own skirting in a similar fashion, though I did use MDF. 11 inches, now that's deep :cool: Or you could even use the board and just plane a chamfer along the top, if you're happy with a minimalist profile.
diy_skirting_board_1.jpg

skirting.jpg

See also:
http://www.thejoyofmoldings.com/pattern-book-molding-millwork-designs/baseboard-molding-designs/
 
Last edited:
Sponsored Links
You could use plain board for the lower part of the profile, and a cheaper panel moulding for the top? That's how skirting used to be made. I made my own skirting in a similar fashion, though I did use MDF. 11 inches, now that's deep :cool: Or you could even use the board and just plane a chamfer along the top, if you're happy with a minimalist profile.
diy_skirting_board_1.jpg

skirting.jpg

See also:
http://www.thejoyofmoldings.com/pattern-book-molding-millwork-designs/baseboard-molding-designs/
Yeah, i'm aware of that trick, hadn't thought of sticking the profile to the wall then adding the baseboard, good tip. Again MDF isn't going to stain well.....
 
I think Gerry was implying you could use timber for the base board .
Another valid point- yes of course I could, walls are all fresh plaster so square, must have a look at prices for skinny wide timber (if I can lay my paws on such- snag may be adding moulding to 5 inch may push the price up to not far from just buying the 7".
 

DIYnot Local

Staff member

If you need to find a tradesperson to get your job done, please try our local search below, or if you are doing it yourself you can find suppliers local to you.

Select the supplier or trade you require, enter your location to begin your search.


Are you a trade or supplier? You can create your listing free at DIYnot Local

 
Back
Top