xy mosian
Established Member
A bloke in the village here is renovating a large late Victorian house, He chats about ways of doing the work, and sometimes finds my thoughts helpful. However he now has a problem I know nowt about.
The house has been re-plastered and to achieve this skirtings have been removed. The problem is that there are two external corners which are radiused. The radius of the curve is around 18" (450mm), it may be more. The skirting is 8" or 9" deep with an ogee moulding. Now I can see that kerfing is the way to go for the lower, plain, bit but the kerfing will break through the moulding. This will leave very short lengths of timber which will drop off with a heavy glance.
What is the best way of getting the moulding to run, well, around the radiused corner?
xy
The house has been re-plastered and to achieve this skirtings have been removed. The problem is that there are two external corners which are radiused. The radius of the curve is around 18" (450mm), it may be more. The skirting is 8" or 9" deep with an ogee moulding. Now I can see that kerfing is the way to go for the lower, plain, bit but the kerfing will break through the moulding. This will leave very short lengths of timber which will drop off with a heavy glance.
What is the best way of getting the moulding to run, well, around the radiused corner?
xy