Recessed Panel Wainscoting Installation - How to Install
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- Опубліковано 25 сер 2015
- MY WEBSITE:
www.thefinishcarpenter.com
THE GLUE I USE:
www.thefinishcarpenter.com/shop
EVERY TOOL I USE:
www.amazon.com/shop/dfwcrownm...
HIRE ME FOR A PROJECT:
www.dfwcrownmoulding.com
. ... FOLLOW ME ON INSTAGRAM :
/ dfwcrown - Навчання та стиль
I am a retired 64 year old car body repair man and I have studied your videos in great depth. This has led me to have a go at Wainscoting my 16 foot x 14 foot dining room which I have now completed and am really pleased with . I would like to sincerely thank you for your detailed information and easy understood explanation of the complete process. Any one thinking on doing this type of work could not visit a better channel for professional craftsmanship, a real master at work and thank you again from Londonderry N Ireland.
OK body repair now that's an exacting profession.
ringside judge awww now you know you can’t just post something like that without showing photos!!🤣
ringside judge
Thanks dad!!!
@Ray H = A hole
@@duanedelperdang1749 Ray Hole
I'm a carpenter for over 25 years and I must say your teaching methodology is perfect !! Your work is very nice as well. Great job and video brother !!
Love how eloquently you speak. Clear concise and informative! Great teacher!
Watching your videos is better than watching TV!
I believe that this man is never getting angry. Very nice job.
So far, all the videos / tutorials by DFW (or Finish CTV) are outstanding.
Thank you for making these videos to help teach how to do this. I chose a different path in construction but I love finish carpentry and how it transforms a room. I have been watching a lot of your videos to get a feel for how I want to trim out my home office and watching this stuff really give me a sense of how much work I am getting myself into but also makes me feel like I have the knowledge base to be successful doing it.
Richard is the man!!! I watched this video maybe 10 times ... bought the pocket hole jig and went to work.... Our office wall came out fantastic... You are the most detailed instructor that I have ever had the pleasure of watching on UA-cam University... Thanks... Doing the coffered ceiling tomorrow...
Thank you for taking the time and effort not only to show the a,b,c's and 123's but having a good quality recording.
I've heard that if I post like this I'm cutting my clientele.
but the reality is your clientele is not your d.i.y'ers.
it's everyone else.
The Dr. that can hold a scalpel with precision....
and put drywall on backwards .
lol
plus they just don't have the time.
And it'd brilliant to be able to show the quality and effort that goes into your work.
And the clients know that they won't have to worry.
Great Job!
Thanks again for your time.
Thank you and God bless
UA-cam University is saving me money.
its saved me $1000's.
Thanks for posting these videos and sharing you knowledge. If you every need help with chemistry, let me know.
Thanks dude! Your channel is like carpentry University online lol
Even my wife is impressed lol
david ellis I
i feel like an employee and youre training me for my first day in trim carpentry. i really enjoy and appreciate your videos. i will be using what your videos taught me and hope to be as good as you.
As a carpenter of some thirty years I can say you did a super nice job of the panelling and a great easy to follow tutorial 👍
I loved this video so much. After years of patching holes in drywall from various mishaps this video inspired me to wainscot my foyer, stairway and upstairs hallway. I supplemented your design by adding 1/8” MDF to add a measure of security against accidents in the recesses. TBH the trim was the hardest part because of figuring out the angles on the stairwell - and I’m a beginner at woodworking. I owe it all to your concise presentation here.
Thanks Dfw crown. Just discovered your channel. This would have saved me a ton of time about 2 years ago. Thanks for responding on the questions also very helpful. Looking forward to watching your other videos
I’ve watched this so many times I don’t think I could ever recreate anything like this lol. This is why you’re the professional!
Your tutorials videos are really inspirational they help me greatly. I wish I could work with you for more carpentry techniques. Thank you so much UA-cam management and the cooperates
You have an audience young man ,and so you should,great work.
Richard, you are not only a craftsman, you are a great teacher. I would love to see you list the projects, tools and supplies you use on each video project. Keep up the great work and the awesome videos.
I watch your videos religiously. It’s made my home look like a diamond. Thanks bro
Thanks so much for these videos. My house is one of hundreds thrown up fast in the 50's, just boxes with roofs and no character. With the help of your video I am installing crown moulding, cabinet trim, baseboards and trim around the doors/windows. You are correct about the black cat. Keep up the good work and keep the videos coming. Thanks
You have got to be the best crown moulding installer I have ever seen! Thanks for all the videos you have been sharing.
Where have you been all my life lol Just found your video's and I'm hooked.... Excellent presentation and skills... Thank you for sharing 👍🏼
I've been a finish carp for 30yrs up in Washington state it's nice to see quality vids on finish carpentry there's so many hacks out there in our line of work it's nice to see the different ways people do stuff.You can never know everything so it's nice to see a diff pov on install. It's nice to see your use of pocket screws I've been trying to use them more and more sometimes it's hard to teach an old dog new tricks. Keep up the good work.Come up to Washington we need more finish carps hit up frontier door .
Beautiful job, calm voice, detailed explaining and no crazy music or too much talking!
i rarely comment on youtube, but you really did a good work and great explanation! Thanks for teaching tutorial!
awesome work, loved the explanation step by step, you spoke clearly ,video had nice picture
thank you!
Not really. He doesn't explain, let alone demonstrate,how anything was cut. A shame.
Thank you for your professional guidance.
Best video I’ve seen. Pocket screwing before hand saves sooooo much time going back sanding to get perfectly flush. Great work 👍
Never short of delivering a great and thoroughly informative videos....true competence, passionate, and sincere to quality work.
Watched again; awesome job. One tip for you: assemble the stiles and rails on the floor like you would crown moulding; upside down, with the base towards the wall and the top farthest away. This will prevent you from mixing up the top and bottom, and also eliminate having to carry the unit out of the room to flip it over. Just lift it up when you are done from the top and nail it to the wall. Also allows you to do it by yourself, since the bottom can be just pushed against the wail, lifting the top into position and placing it against the MDF wall panel.
Excellent tutorial, very much enjoyed. Keep the videos coming!
dfw crown awesome job learning a lot thank you... now how much can I charge for something like that? Of course if you don't mind telling me😜
I just wanted to say thanks for taking the time to share your knowledge. You are the type of guy that makes the internet a great thing... no joke- thanks man.
Great video. I like how you don't have a lot of "extra" talking or crazy music. You are very exact about everything and very instructional. Great work. I am also a finish carpenter and have done these projects. I like you work. Keep it up!
Looks absolutely fantastic! Thanks for this incredibly informative and detailed video. I’m very optimistic about tackling this project in our master bedroom.
Fantastic job and video, great lesson! Watched a video before this with an average Joe & kids do this by just nailing 1x4's to the wall. He nailed the inside vertical pieces just into the wall board. Even a average handyman like me can tell those will eventually loosen and pull out. I liked the solid screwed together one piece design you did. Full panel MDF on the wall is way to go, can you imagine cutting all those separate pieces to right dimensions. Thanks for the lesson.
I enjoyed watching this video in the past, and again today! What perfection!!
Thanks for your time to explain clear step by step, I am a carpenter and I really love your channel keep on doing what you do my friend... like I always say life is a school you learn something new every single day!!
Nice work. You make it look easy.
thank you sir
🤑😝😜🤓😡☹️😶💀🙇🏽🙇😛
Michael Aitchison how.to.clean.ceill
Indra Mahabir
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Awesome job! Love your videos. When you cut the molding do you have to raise it up by the thickness of the stiles/rails to get the 45 deg angle?
You're so detail oriented, that's what makes a great Craftsman.
Love the way you talk very clear, precise and calm
Awesome video and very helpful. My only question is what is the thickness of the MDF panel and the thickness of the rails/styles? Any light you could shed on this would be greatly appreciated.
I learned a lot today in UA-cam trade school 🏫
I would love to thank you sincerely for the detailed information on wainscoting installation. I am going to install a similar wainscoting in my house thanks to you, I've always wanted to have this on my walls but have never really known how to go about it. God bless!
Very detailed worker, wish you guys were in my area. Very rare to find top class workmanship. Keep up the great work and videos.
Once a fantastic video. Please show a up close pic of the trim molding and how you joined that with caulking to your chair molding. What size nails do you use? Is all of the backing and frame MDF and why MDF for anything?
Could you let me know the thickness of MDF ? o thickness of thin whole sheet of MDF / o thickness of thick stile(frame)
I have seen many carpenters doing the panel wainscoting and as you said, those guys place piece by piece as they go along amd leave thousands of holes on the MDF. I am a professional painter, I wish all carpenters were as professional, responsible and wise as you are. Congratulations and keep doing that amazing work!!!!
I have been searching the internet for comprehensive and easy to follow videos for wall panels ya’ll is the best … other then the professional Maschinerie that I cannot afford I am just a civilian house wife that wants to update her home … but I just love your tutorials, with any luck I can follow some of them and und the process update my home here in Colorado Springs then sell it in summer 2022 and move to DFW if I can find a home I can afford 🥰
Excellent video!! I will be installing two sections of wainscoting 12 feet long for each side. I'm basically doing the same design as yours. How would I go about estimating the job? What was your estimate for this job? Any help is appreciated.
Thank you!
Yeah, I learned that if I have to do this install; I’m hiring you!
Planning to have a go next week. You make it look so easy. Thank you for the great video.
Beautiful Job!! The honey-do list just keeps getting longer and longer since I found you guys on UA-cam. Thanks for all of the great tips and short cuts!! 😃
Thanks for the details in your videos and please keep them coming. Question on the shoe moulding, I noticed in this and your glaze video that you are putting a shoe moulding at the top of the chair rail. If your first MDF sheet is 1/4" and the second for the rails/stiles is 3/4", that would total an inch you would have to cover in order to not see the seam/joint of the chair rail. Is your shoe moulding that wide or are you caulking/sanding that seam and just covering the 1/4" MDF sheet? Second question, the chair rail in your glaze video appears quite wide, almost appears to have a ledge or cap like in assembling a traditional wainscot panel. What is that one called? Thanks for any help.
Jacob Maddox
essential craftsman
essential craftsman........................... Some of his videos are not that great
Anytime you can post an informative video on UA-cam you make a little extra $$$$.
how did you handle the line where the two back panels butt together - did you figure out ahead of time where the stiles would fall and covered the butt line with a stile?
john mc dowell yes exactly.
Beautiful job, simple, well explained and executed. Thank you for sharing your techniques and tips. I might give this a shot on my remodeling project.
Hey bud, just wanted to thank you for sharing your videos on UA-cam. I'm a DIY'er and found all the videos you've posted extremely helpful. Hopefully someday I'll be as open to sharing my knowledge too! haha. Thanks again!!
Thanks a lot bro! As asked before, roughly how much would this cost with the MDF? Also, what brad nail did you use?
@Ray H Jeez seems a lot of work for 2 mill
When you nail the first sheet of 1/4" mdf, are you hitting the studs or just going into the drywall?
Gary Z - I would guess he's just hitting drywall. The glue is doing the bonding. The nails are just to keep it from sagging or waving till the OSI bonds up. I did this same job in Vegas in a hotel years ago and the specs didn't call for hitting studs because of the glue. The MDF is only 1/4" so the panel doesn't weigh that much and the blow out or pull out in the drywall will be none to minimal. . I'd more concerned with nail length and depth not to strike any wiring or plumbing.
I would suggest hitting the stud if you can because it will offer better overall stability even if you are only putting in a few nails.
I just wanted to say thanks and let you know what an awesome job I think you're doing I'm just recently getting into working on my own house and enjoying it I've been scouring the internet and watching different people's videos you are by far one of my favorite UA-cam channels just subscribe you thank you so much I really appreciate your Insight and knowledge
Excellent detail! Learn something every time I watch your videos.
I've never met a wall that just "laid itself out."
Use algebra, that's why we had to learn it in school:
Where 3.5" is inside stile, n is number of panels, y is width of panel, 173.25" is total wall width
3.5(n+1) + ny = 173.25 or y = (173.25 - 3.5(n+1)) / n
Pick a value for n, solve for y, and see if the output dimension is to your liking. You have to do it in this order, because n is an integer, while y is very likely a fractional number. Hope this helps.
Thank you sir for taking the time to post this..Appreciated..!!
I'm really confused now ... what the hell is this ?
grm3300: Simple really... He's just computing the total width of the stiles and the total width of the panels and adding them together; this equals the total width of the wall.
-So-
Stiles are 3.5" and you have 1 more stile than the number of panels because you have that extra one on the end (they wrap the panels basically).
3.5(n+1)
Number of panels times the width of a panel is the total linear width of panels.
ny (n times y as in multiplication)
Add those 2 values together and it has to equal the total width of the wall you are working with.
The second equation he put up is the just first one solved for y since that is the value you are trying to determine; the width of each panel to make them layout evenly across the wall. Remember that the width of each panel is the only thing you don't know in the beginning.
@@robertsalas3984 Did you just come on UA-cam to be entertained on how to do waincotting? Mathematics is how real carpenters calculate the accuracy of a technical job. I always wondered how it worked out, and a pencil and paper gets you there, and adding in commonsense math makes the look professional. Anything less than that, then you're not in the buildings trade.
In this particular case n was 7, there are n+1=8 stiles times 3.5" = 28 inches total. 173.25 - 28 = 145.25; divide that by 7 to get 20.75 inches for the width of each panel.
is the chalk line level or do you just measure from the bottom of floor to desired height on both ends?
read my mind in case the floor is sagged in an older home
That is where the artistic portion of this type of work plays into the plan of a project like this. It is sometimes necessary to install trim out of level or square to give the appearance of an even reveal in situations when floors, ceilings or walls are not square, plumb, or true. It can add hours of work to an ordinarily quick job if all was perfect and isn't easily done.
missmymountain ... Just wow...
measure from the floor in the corners, mark the wall, measure length, hang the piece and then go level through the middle to take out any sag
Keep parallel to the floor so that your MDF is cut square.
Amazing how far you’ve come. Keep learning, keep building.
So thankful that you take the time to make these videos.
7:19 - Meow (cat made a cameo in the background)
El gato.
Have you tried using a notched trowel to spread the glue?
Was thinking the same thing for even coverage
Then you have to clean that crap off the trowel that's stuff isn't water based
I use a linoleum glue 4" blade it has V notches around 1/8" deep, works great
+rats arsed
What do you mean could not afford to do it right? Do you mean he did not do it with completely solid wood?
Excellent work. I too am a professional in Canada. Your videos reflect true high end workmanship
This is a very good video and its going to help me with my projects. Great discussion and I appreciate your attention to detail. You are an excellent instructor.
wheres the glue on mitres
steve lehner- I was thinking the exact same thing. Good vid otherwise
Finally!! Someone does it right with the hole sheet. I Applaud you sir. Great video and nicely detailed.
Im a pretty handy guy but i dont think i could ever do this and have it turn out this good. Great work man. Love the videos.
You have really good videos. The pocket screw idea is awesome - would initially seem to take longer but it saves a ton of touch ups and sanding doing it any other way. Great stuff!!
You do a stellar job with instruction and you're thorough. Nice job.
This guy is great! Thanks for sharing your knowledge. I hope UA-cam is working for you because of guys like you, it works or me!
Hey. Thank you so much for the time and instructions. You are a classy guy and you do a great job and do it the right way. I appreciate your help.
I'm 72 have done carpenter work off and on since I was 18. You have a ton of knowledge for your age, you do great work. I have learned a couple of things from you at my age of 72.
Great job. I really like the look of it without the panel molding as well; kind of the simple look; more appropriate for the notsofancy houses out there! I'm going to use your tutorial to install this wainscoting without the molding. Great video.
Thanks for taking the time to film, great video
Excellent tutorial, have not seen anyone that has the skills and ability to explain what needs to be done and how to do it right
Impressive workmanship and dedication to excellence. A big thumbs up!!
I just did my bedroom, I wish i would seen this video first. Drilling pocket holes and laying it out on the floor was brilliant, this would have saved me so much sanding because of my uneven walls.. thank you very much!! i am definitely doing this on my next project
Incredible work guys, I'm inspired but your knowledge and skill. That wall looks fantastic
Awesome video!! Very informative! Thanks for taking the time to film it!
I appreciate the detailed explanations. Your work is impeccable and really beautiful. It's a pleasure to watch your videos. You're a perfectionist and it shows in your work. Very inspiring and useful as I consider trying my hand at adding similar elements to a few of my rooms.
Thank you for uploading these videos! Extremely educational.
Fantastic tip about hiding nail holes in MDF with the trim. Worth watching!!!
All of this guys videos are EXCELLENT!
This was incredible! Amazing craftsmanship...I think your talents are hard to come by
Great video ...keep them coming ....Learn a lot from a great master ....
Thanks for taking your time making this video! Really good job! Great tips from a pro.
I’m ready for my first wainscoting install have only some basic trim work so far excited Thanks
dude, youre a real professional!! very impressed!
Beautiful work and the finished wall looked amazing!
Man, you are good at your profession. Thanks for the video.
Geez, you're good! Thanks for sharing your incredible talents!
Beautiful work! I love your videos. You've inspired me.
Great video, and great craftsmanship. Well done!
Nice work, thank You for letting us improve our skills.
Really enjoy your videos. You're really good at what you do, and it's cool you take the time to showcase your work. God bless.
Love your videos! It helped a lot today installing it in the bathroom!