Sentences with phrase «do wainscoting»

cant wait til spring temps rise — i call it «spray painting season» — I have plans to do wainscoting in my dining room... after I repaint my 1991 orange oak kitchen cabinets (and secretly repaint the kitchen a vivid orchid color... do nt tell hubby!)!
I want to do wainscoting under a chair rail, too.

Not exact matches

There was not a single 15 - yard penalty called in the game, a conflict that probably could have been fought in a drawing room with no harm done to the wainscoting.
I have always wanted to have a statement dining room, but the architecture of my 1980's house doesn't lend it to formal wainscoting or over the top lighting.
We will be painting our kitchen this winter and I am planning to do light gray walls with our white wainscoting.
The scale and physical eccentricity of the work do not take well to wainscoting and other unavoidable facts of the academy's busy Beaux - Arts interior.
In the modern era, wainscoting isn't needed for insulation, but it does help protect a home's plaster walls from inevitable dents and scuffing.
I don't know what it is about wainscoting and beautiful trimwork that gets me so excited, but it does.
Layla, a question about the chair rail molding... Did you butt the bottom of it against the top of the wainscoting, or did you overlap the molding to sit on the front of the wainscotiDid you butt the bottom of it against the top of the wainscoting, or did you overlap the molding to sit on the front of the wainscotidid you overlap the molding to sit on the front of the wainscoting?
(Meaning: the lower 2/3 portion of the walls have wainscoting, the upper 1/3 does not.)
You might notice we didn't do any wood behind the trim, as is typical of real board and batten wainscoting.
Tell Mark he did a great job on the wainscoting.
Good news is my painters will return Tuesday to paint the cabinet in the kitchen and finish filling (caulking) and painting the rest of the wainscoting through the entry over the next week (we didn't have enough time to paint all that wainscoting before the holidays!).
Or does one simply think in terms of wainscoting and vary it large or small to one's taste?
You could also ditch the wainscoting / trim molding idea all together to create «distraction - free» walls, but I think as long as the contrast is low, whatever you do with your wainscoting / trim molding will add character to the room and look lovely!
I was originally going to do some tall wainscoting in here (hence, the partially primed walls), but I've had about a year to think about things, and I've decided to go in a slightly different direction.
I love having the thick wood wainscoting because I don't worry about heavier stuff hanging there, it is very solid.
If your bathtub or shower is tiled inside the enclosure but stops at the edge, and you can find matching tile, have it extended (or do it yourself, with new ceramic tile mounting kits available at box stores) the rest of the way around the bathroom to the 48» mark, like wainscoting.
I'm now thinking of doing that fake wainscoting (with painted walls and trim).
She said they want to do some kind of board & batten style wainscoting on the lower half, too.
Once I added the hooks and wainscoting to the left side of the front door in the entry, the need for more «entry space» in the adjoining living room didn't seem as important or necessary, but we still are intrigued with using the living room as a «gathering» room as opposed to a formal living room.
We chose to do the «picture frame» style wainscoting.
However, in most other cases you would use semi-gloss for wainscoting and we did that in the family room and for all of the trim throughout.
When we added wainscoting to our living room, we used 4» x 8» dry erase boards from Lowes to panel the bottom part of the wall (no kidding), and we did it again in this room.
Essentially what you are doing is using a bold change in colors to simulate the look of a wainscoting.
We did white wainscoting with a shelf / trim on top.
But we just got the saw a couple of days ago, so we still don't have wainscoting or chair rail up.
My little sister thought I should treat it like the «whole» space were a wainscoting and thereby make the upper floor mimic the upper part of the wall when having wainscoting or like when doing board and batten.
We have similar wainscoting in our downstairs to what you did and I am thinking about continuing it throughout the upstairs, but that would involve removing a lot of baseboards!
I do love white backdrops with architectural interest, anytime a room has some chunky white wainscoting, molding, paneled doors, beadboard on walls or ceilings (be still my heart!)
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