In a nutshell, skirting is my nemesis.
I'm learning but I'm sure there is an easier way and looking for any useful YouTube/guides you recommend on getting the angles right.
Most out there deals with the perfectly flat wall and the perfectly plumb walls, leading to "just set your mitre saw to 45 degrees" etc.
In the real world, if we take a standard 4 wall room, pick one wall and you've got 2 walls perpendicular to it. You've got that internal corner scribe to contend with (again not just 45 then scribe, possibly an angle to each on the vertical). Then you've got the floor rarely perfectly flat. If you scribe the bottom of the skirting to the floor first it's inaccurate as your skirting isn't exactly in the right position without the internal scribes. Conversely if you do the internal scribes first, they won't be in the perfect position without the bottom scribed to the floor
This is my 3rd attempt at skirting and I'm finding it so frustrating I'm assuming there must be a trick I'm missing (or the norm is for a lot of caulk!)
I'm learning but I'm sure there is an easier way and looking for any useful YouTube/guides you recommend on getting the angles right.
Most out there deals with the perfectly flat wall and the perfectly plumb walls, leading to "just set your mitre saw to 45 degrees" etc.
In the real world, if we take a standard 4 wall room, pick one wall and you've got 2 walls perpendicular to it. You've got that internal corner scribe to contend with (again not just 45 then scribe, possibly an angle to each on the vertical). Then you've got the floor rarely perfectly flat. If you scribe the bottom of the skirting to the floor first it's inaccurate as your skirting isn't exactly in the right position without the internal scribes. Conversely if you do the internal scribes first, they won't be in the perfect position without the bottom scribed to the floor
This is my 3rd attempt at skirting and I'm finding it so frustrating I'm assuming there must be a trick I'm missing (or the norm is for a lot of caulk!)