Doug71
Established Member
Before you start ripping things out and to reiterate what I said earlier look at the casing (cupboard?) in the middle.
The door on that cupboard opens into the hallway, the others open into the rooms, this means the rebate on the cupboard casing is on the hallway side but the others have the rebate on the room side. To keep the architraves the same level and the margins the same on the hall side you would need to drop the cupboard casing down or pack the top down as suggested. The problem with this is the cupboard door is then lower than the others so the panels, handles etc on that door won't line up with the other doors. You can see on the photo the architrave was originally higher above the cupboard door for this reason.
If you use flat linings with a lath planted on to form the rebate you don't have this problem as you can just run all the tops in line.
The door on that cupboard opens into the hallway, the others open into the rooms, this means the rebate on the cupboard casing is on the hallway side but the others have the rebate on the room side. To keep the architraves the same level and the margins the same on the hall side you would need to drop the cupboard casing down or pack the top down as suggested. The problem with this is the cupboard door is then lower than the others so the panels, handles etc on that door won't line up with the other doors. You can see on the photo the architrave was originally higher above the cupboard door for this reason.
If you use flat linings with a lath planted on to form the rebate you don't have this problem as you can just run all the tops in line.