Fitting architraves on uneven re-plastered walls (1920’s Renovation Part 28)
Вставка
- Опубліковано 27 сер 2021
- It’s time to fit new architraves and skirting boards. In this videos I’m showing you my approach to fitting new ogee architraves on freshly plastered walls. Next time we’ll cover the skirting boards.
Just spotted after rendering, Tim from the Restoration Couple has made an excellent video on this subject, similar approach. Great channel, worth checking out:
• Fitting Architrave aft...
Here’s the full 1920’s semi renovation playlist:
• 1920's SEMI RENOVATION
Budget, projects costs and more over on the Member Zone:
members.gosforthhandyman.com
Buy locally sourced T-shirts and other lovely stuff from our little shop:
gosforthhandyman.com/shop/
Help me let you know about new vids - subscribe to my free newsletter here:
gosforthhandyman.com
TOOLS & PRODUCTS I USE: gosforthhandyman.com/products...
INSTA: / gosforthhandyman
I sometimes use affiliate links - these don’t cost you a penny and help to keep this channel going. Read more about affiliate links here - the fairest way of funding the internet: gosforthhandyman.com/affiliat... - thanks so much for your awesome support!
All content on this channel is exclusively owned by MacLellan Creative Limited. Copyright (c) 2021. All rights reserved.
#Renovation #DIY #Architraves - Навчання та стиль
I have lost count of the times I search for a video to solve an issue I am having with my 1940's renovation and you save the day, thank you.
Hi Andy. Just completed a similar job to this yesterday in daughter's 1960s house Reno. I didn't rip all pieces to suit individual skim thickness,I ripped every strip to 5 mm. No doubt I'll be using caulk when fitting architrave. Anyway this video was a Godsend as I wouldn't have had a clue where to start. Love all your vids. All presented in a straightforward,no nonsense way. Good luck with your future youtubing👍
Packing the frame is ideal way to get around the build up of plaster regardless of the extra time it takes - looks so much better. Great job.
One of my fave jobs is skirting and arci. Customers reaction once its done is always the best. Top tip. Caulk it as you go. Makes a huge difference to how it looks and paint and decs will love you forever.
Wish I'd seen something like this nearly forty years ago, when (with hardly any DIY skills at all) I moved into an old house in which the previous owner had removed all the architraves, taping the plaster/wood junction and painting over (you could see the frames working against the plaster too, where the fixings had loosened)...ditto the skirting boards where powder dropped on the plaster/floorboard junction any time you walked near where they should've been...surrounded by children, working long hours at an office job daytime and with no workshop, decorating every room was a late night orgy of refitting all the woodwork (with minimal tools/budget and maximum sticking plaster) before we could even start...and because the missus favoured the stripped/varnished timber style oh god...and the neighbours in the next door semi really loved me! By the time the bedrooms came round I'd got the confidence to essay picture rails, and in the sitting room the dado rail too...I've still no carpentry skills but aged close to 70 I can bodge things now!
It’s nice of you to take us on this journey with you. Great job Andy 🌞
Cheers and no worries! 👍
Excellent video aptly applies to my one door architrave job. Will be using this method.
I’m loving this series!
Thanks for that, just the wisdom I needed. Working on a 1880s house in New Zealand that we gibbed. It had sarking. Awesome.
I've been waiting 7months for different chipys to come in and fit my architrave and skirting. Not one has shown up so now I'm attempting it myself. This video is probably the only video that's made sense, and looked good when done. My house is also old. Built 1953 and walls stick out further than the door liner! Great video!!👌
This is the first 30 min long video I have clicked on in a while… and it was worth every second. Incredibly useful. Thank you very much for taking the time to make this.
I've done loads of this recently. I've been glueing on strip's with Pu glue before plaster. Plasterer goes up to it, and the Pu fills the gap quite well and only needs minimal filling before painting 🙂 been working well
You make it look so easy.. Great attention to detail. Excellent Jon and house is looking good. Can't wait to see it finished.
When I see a 34 minute video, I think "I really don't have the time, I should get on". 34 minutes later, I am totally engrossed and sorry it's finished. Looks good, Andy👏🏼
Ha thank you Mandy! 👍😁
What a brilliant video, I have an old house and will be using your pre-assembly method for door trim. Excellent mate
Thanks
This is a brilliant video. Im rewatching again as I have a whole house of doors and architraves to do soon. Keep up the good uploads
A great video, thanks. It illustrates well the “delights” of working on an older house!
Cheers! A lot of folk just don't appreciate what is involved. 👍
The joys of working on a reno. Deciding what extra work you need to do, to prevent a harder and more complicated job. Everything has pros and cons, and sometimes time restraints trump everything else.
Cheers! Yup, it's all about sensible compromises in houses like this. 👍
First time commenting... just want to say thanks for all the vids. I’ve been devouring them and they’ve been super helpful as we renovate our new to us house. Admire your zen-like calmness and skill as you approach these jobs. More power to ya! You’ve a beautiful home in the making there Andy.
Thank you for the kind words! 👍
We do this regularly. The double margin method for the grounds and archs is the best way as you say. When it is painted only the keenest eyed tradesman would be able to spot it.
Defo - it's a nice detail too 👍
I'm just doing this job at home for the very first time. Thankfully, I've been doing it the right way, although I used a multi-tool to get rid of the old plaster. I've found it made a much cleaner (but much dustier) edge for the architrave.
Thank you so much
You’re doing a great job Andy 🙌
Cheers Rod!
A month ago I didn't know who you were now I have watched about 100 of your videos. Most exciting to see the latest ones 👍
Cheers Chris - glad you're enjoying the vids! 👍
Hi Andy ☺ thanks for the video, some great problem solving tips there, I had to laugh when you mentioned that some houses might have flat walls, in my experience no house I've ever been in has had flat walls or 90 degree corners , a family member bought a pretty new detached house , and I helped them put down a laminate floor, we fitted new skirtings, and every corner was out on the whole ground floor, so I will watch whith interest how you go about fitting skirting in your house, and no doubt pick up some good tips as usual, cheers mate ,stay safe, best wishe's to you and your's, Stuart uk.
Job well done... rehab is always a pain, you've come up with many unique solutions for this house.
I think I'll need rehab after this. 👍🤣
Good job Andy .
Cheers bud!
Nice job Andy.👍
The Tatty bye has returned and all is well with the world once more! Whilst you seem to get it in the neck from some viewers, I appreciate the detailed commentary you provide - thanks (PS love the thumbnail 😆)
Cheers yes! All fixed. Currently can't decide between 2 different thumbnails. Will see how this one does. 😁👍
I took on the skirtings and architraves on my renovation and it's a quite enjoyable job .
Yes, it's quite a satisfying job in the scheme of things. 😁
God Bless the multi tool!
Oh yes, couldn't live without it these days. 😁
Nice Andy, the Tall Carpenter had some great tips for architrave. Deffo worth a look for anyone wanting another / similar approach.
Fantastic job mate 👍🏻
Andy I’m really glad you built your archs before installing them. Definetly the right way to do it.
Another thing I do is pin the case extenders on and have them plaster up to them so I know the arch’s will go on perfect
Cheers! Yeah, I gave the plasterer that option but he was happy to skim up to the frames. 👍
All coming together nicely. Always amazes me how skirtings and architraves transform a building site to a home 👍🏻
Cheers! Yes, makes a huge differences getting the trims fitted. 👍
I wish my builder were thoughtful like him…..
nice job, well done !!
omg! ive done loads of architraves and never thought about this. Will def set mine back in future
I think the double quirk looks really good once painted. 👍👍
I’ve encountered this exact problem! Some parts of the house the plasterwork sits flush allowing larger profiles other up to 10mm debating whether to replace like for like to save a lot of issues 😂
Very informative, it's not easy to find these issues explained in such detail!
No worries!
Awesome mate, you covered my dilema in a brilliantly clear format, bloody excellent, subcribed.
Nice solution to a tricky problem
Another useful well explained video, thanks.
Cheers and no worries!
Its these little finishes that make it all come together - looking good! Btw I'd move that switch round onto the main wall.
Cheers! Yeah, that switch will get moved at some point. 👍😁
Nice work Andy, I was always taught to step them back to create a “quirk” . Looks much better . I’ve done this many times also, I put the strips on before they plaster now , so they can skim up to it . Works a treat. House is coming along great Andy
Cheers bud! Yup I think next time I'd do the strips first - I did ask them and they weren't bothered but I think it might have been easier for them too. 👍
In my neck of the woods in the US, the term architrave is rarely used. We refer to door and window trim. Skirting is also not that common here. We call it a baseboard. Another example of two countries divided by a common language.
Unlike insulating and subflooring, now you're doing work that will show!
Cheers! Yes, nice to finally be on the trim detail 😁👍
I've got this job to look forward to. It'll look 👌🏻 after some caulk and paint
Too right - caulk fixes everything. 😁👍
Keep up the good work. Love ur channel..
Thank you!
Looks great with the double rebate, wish you had done it a few weeks ago though when I did mine. I had no idea how to get round the new plaster and I thought I was bodging it just by using a thin strip to make up the difference but at least I got that bit right. But I've just done the one rebate so got to try and sand or plane it down nicely with filler to hide the gap as best as possible.
Cheers! Yes, I do like the double rebate. 👍👍
I U.S. we call it woodwork or moulding. Never heard the word architrave. Interesting. Looking good. You are a master.
Thanks for the kind words! 👍
That looks really great. I've never used CA glue but I think it might be on the shopping list soon.
Contact adhesive ie ca glue is fantastic stuff it goes off instantly. Definitely put this on your shopping list
This was a great video, exactly what I was looking for and will save me a lot of wasted time 👍.
Lovely job Andy.... aesthetically pleasing.... you're right to quit when you're physically and mentally tired.
Cheers! Yup, that's when mistakes happen. 😁
Love it fantastic thank you!,
Have the exact same problem right now in my house!
Hey Andy.... The double set back is always the way I attack this. Once you get the "hang over" of paint/stain scraped away it all seems to blend much better. Cheers, Bob.
Cheers! Yeah, once it's all painted up it looks like it was always like that. 👍
Interesting, that style of instant glue wasn't around when we did this many moons ago, like 30+ years. Like the attention to detail as well in all the videos.
Nice one Andy - thank you for the great content. I replaced a load of architraves in my late 70's ex-council house - none of the door lintels were level, none of the frames were square, none of the walls were square or straight...and half of the door frames were less than a full fascia moulding width from the wall - safe to say I upskilled my scribing technique! Shame was as soon as I finished it we decided to sell up and have bought a larger house in the countryside with parts dating back to 1850...she's starting to give up her dirty secrets after a few months and I can see the to-do list forming! :D PS - got my huge Screwfix dustpan and brush...life is complete.
Ha - that dustpan and brush is a game changer! 👍😁
You've made a pro job of those architraves. I think that fitting grounds is the best way to get over this common renovation problem👍 The only thing I would do slightly differently, would be to cut and fit the grounds first and then let the plasterer skim up to them👊 (splitting hairs though), Great video.
Cheers bud! I asked the plasterer if he wanted to but up to my grounds but they weren't that bothered. In hindsight I think I'd do that though 👍
@@GosforthHandyman Either way works.👍 In my opinion, any other way would be a bit of a bodge😬 Great videos
That way it would be easier to get them at a consistent thickness and there will be no large gaps behind the architraves.
@@Tom-Lahaye 😉
Great channel, learning lots of stuff. My one observation is that I would have been very tempted to re-hang some of those doors on the other side, maybe swapping the doors over between rooms if they're a similar size, it's a lot more work though as the light switch has to be moved too
I did this a few weeks ago, spent ages messing about trying to compensate for the door frames being out by adjusting the mitre angles from the door frames with the sliding bevel. Absolute ballache and ended up just 45ing the mitres and ignoring any misalignment.
Yeah, I would always go for the 45 if possible as it looks better in the end. 👍
The facings are looking great, I would have moved the dining room switch to the adjacent wall or changed the existing switch to an architrave switch.
Yeah, wish I'd done that. Future job and I'll replace the cut-out architrave. 👍
What's an architrave switch look like? Never heard of one.
@@norm4260 small (narrow) switch.
"...architrave light switches are ideal for areas such as where door frames are placed close together, or in tight corners. These restricted wall spaces cannot accommodate the size of a normal light switch, but equally they may be the ideal location for a switch due to wiring or functionality."
Another Quality Vid cheers, Marra stay safe,
Cheers bud!
Good job lad
Double set back looks best
It does look good! Especially once painted. 👍
Hi Andy,
I worked in construction for over 50 years in the North East ( Newcastle, Whitley Bay, Durham, Gateshead etc) as a decorator, and picked up a lot of tips from the various trades I worked with so I had enough knowledge to be able to hang doors, fit skirtings, do a bit of plumbing, electrical etc etc, in the various properties I have owned over the years. I've always said that the main difference between a tradesman and an amateur is a tradesman knows how to get over any problems if something isn't straightforward. My problem is I faff on too much trying to get everything spot on level, plumb etc, whereas (as you mention) you have got to know when to walk away and accept that especially in old properties things are not going to be level and plumb. ( Mind you, some of the new builds that I've worked on would give these old properties a run for their money,( as you well know)😁Once more another great video, it looks like Mrs Mac has done a fine job mist coating !!
Cheers bud! Yeah, Mrs Mac has been a trooper and done pretty much all the painting single handed. Big job from bare plaster as you know! 👍😁
That drawing is a true representation of 1920 walls not one is square. Great video. Getting so close
Cheers! Yes, some of the door frames I've seen over the years have looked a lot like that.
@@GosforthHandyman Lol that's my house. Not one door frame is level or plumb. The house is going to be amazing. Great job. Really enjoying this series of videos.
Learned a lot from this video, great stuff!
Use an architrave switch instead of cutting the architrave away, looks neater too…
Yes I dislike cut outs in architraves. Can you put an architrave switch on a normal electrical box, or do you need to change it to a matching box? Andy has time constraints so that 1 switch could add half a day. Rewiring, replacing the box, filling or plastering and drying, before fitting that architrave.
Good video and like the rebate. I’ve just been doing all mine and my god for a full house with skirting prices have gone up nearly £250 since December 😳. Great work
Oh no! Luckily we bought ours before the prices went too crazy. 😬
Absolutely awesome video, yet again! Great advice, thank you. One bit of advice in return is to put a piece of A4 paper underneath the architrave at the corners to prevent it sticking to the floorboards. It's easy to overdo the mitre glue and end up with a problem. The excess paper is easily cut off 👍
Good tip with the paper! I was rushing. 👍😁
Had to laugh at this comment I do the paper trick too after I glued a architrave to a laminate floor one day 😅
I did this recently. I ended up chiseling the plaster away and 'embedding' the trim into the wall a bit. Inch thick plaster meant I could use plasterboard and filler to clean the gaps
Main reason i did it this way is I took the doors off and wanted the archways to look thinner.
Also: making a problem a 'feature'... I thought I was the only one! ;)
Fair play to you! Chiselling the plaster back would be a labour of love. 👍😁
This is how work should be done, had the same problem but the joiner went ahead installing the architraves, spend a lot of time and money caulking large gaps
Great job! Your wander around at the end did start making me feel sea sick with all the panning.
Oops! I think the battering in my gimbal was dying.
3rd option would be to rebate the back of the architrave, something I’ve done 😉 of course dependant on the size of the mismatch. CA joints all the way👍🏻
Sounds like hardest option lol
The old 'double quirk' trick...
In my 20s house, back then they did first coat of plaster to the door frames (lath and plaster) then fixed the skirting, architrave then did the second skim after. The skirting board was just pencil round with fancy architrave. When I renovated, I used door stops on the face of the casing flush like your first method, and scribed using a multi tool. Doing it that way also means new door stops and relocating the hinges - I should've just made new door casings :) It was a fair wack of work, especially with the state of the old casings.
I always check the old door frames for square (mine are terrible), I use an angle finder and bifurcate the angle and set the chop saw to that angle instead of 45
I don't use caulk for filling gaps on skirting \ architrave - I use something like the no nonsense plaster in a tube that fits in a skeleton gun, much better finish
I've seen that occasionally before, where the plaster is butted up to the trim. Interesting!
You didn't say it in this video, but the other day at work I told my co worker that something was "done and dusted". I am an American and I had never heard that phrase until watching your videos. Now I use it without even thinking about it. Funny how language travels. Hahaha.
Ha that's fantastic! 👍😁
Love the videos...I bought a house built in 1929. It is a challenge.
Thanks for explaining all the issues involved. I would much more appreciate if you could explain also the thickness of the shim that you are putting on the jambs as it would be different for each frame even for each jamb and I reckon it's a main challenge of such situation. Thanks a lot
Very good 👍x
Could you a video on tools that have saved you time during this renovation i.e. The brad nailer etc… cheers!
I was taught to always fit the top architrave first and then you can adjust the square of the legs to suit
Yup, that's what I did. 👍
Toolstation have a clearance sale on some Freud blades. It's been going on for a few weeks but it's worth checking online for stock at your local stores.
Just had a quick look - some good deals there!
Same issue but mine is also a different thickness at the top and bottom!
Thank you Andy!
Was wondering why you went for chipboard in the kitchen and kept the original.wood in the other rooms?
I've found woodworm issues in our 1930s semi detached renovation on the ground floor especially kitchen and living room so it would be great to her your advice for chipboards in the kitchen, whilst using reclaimed/new pine wood in the living and dining room. (Kitchen, dining, living is now open plan).
Thank you for your help!
Andy, would love it if you would mention the names of the musical pieces that are being played during your videos. I am really loving some of them and would like to see if I can find them for my own use. I didn't see any mentioned or listed in your notes. Thanks
Great video but I have a question how do you adjust the strip wood so its thin at certain points say 1mm and 4mm at others.
Art Deco style is great, btw. There are lots of Poirot mystery movies on UA-cam that show terrific examples of British Art Deco buildings.
Indeed! In the right place art deco can be amazing. 👍
Oy vay. My plumber came in this week (after a 3 week wait) to fix a leak for a radiator. He ripped out vast swatches of wall and floor. I now have a couple weeks of work just to repair them.
Fab job. I was wondering if there were panel doors lurking downstairs
Hoping so! Haven't tackled those yet 😁
I have always rebated the Architraves on my table saw to get a nice neat finish. No need to fill or use Decorators Cork. I don't like modern Gloss paint as it is not as good as the old Lead paint in terms of finish.
Can always rebate the back of the architrave if it's only a small protrusion but I do prefer pack out method, plus it makes more boring moulds like ogee and torus look a little more intricate
Defo - plus rebating the back is a labour of love. 👍😁
Great video with lots of good tips. Thanks for that.
I have a problem with replacing the architraves in a house I'm refurbishing in that the wall plaster is only a couple of millimeters proud of the door framing. I would need to use veneer as a fill in pieces. Would it be acceptable to build up the door framing with wood filler and architrave over that?
I think you do a great job of balancing the final look of the job Vs time/effort required. It's all too easy for people in the comments to say rip out the door liners replace with new etc etc but you have a deadline to keep, it's really not a job for a perfectionist.
Cheers! Yeah, it's amazing what people say in the comments compared to what they would actually do if they were on site. 👍😂
Renovating an old house, at some stage for each job you have to say this will do and refurb from that point. I had wormy floor board ends in 1 room, worm killed and proofed, replaced the floor, but 1 of the joists was twisted! Still creaks a bit but a new floor joist with same dimensions as the original split tree joists would have taken time and tools I didn't have. So a 1720s house creaks a bit, not a big surprise!
Door trim around the light switch I really wouldn't be happy with that. All looking good so far.
Cheers! Yeah, it's something I will address over time 👍
Caulk is your best friend for jobs like this.
I lad
Just had to re skirt a bedroom in an old ex council house. The hardest part was removing the old stuff as it was buried under god knows how many re-skims. And the customer had had new carpets fitted last year, big thick pile ones. So I couldn't pry it up without damaging the plaster, which they'd recently repainted and I couldn't pry sideways without bring up the carpets.
Was a hot sweaty ball ache of a job, and I went thru all my multitool blades.
Also, they didn't want the arcs replacing so I had to put returns on the skirtings because it sat about 5mm proud where I was butting up to the arcs.
Looked pretty decent afterwards tho.
Customer was happy.
I wasn't, I priced it thinking it would take a day, took me a day and a half.
Oh well, live and learn
Oh god, what a job!? Good going getting it done in a day and a half! 👍
@@GosforthHandyman swings and roundabouts. I knew it would be a bugger but still I underestimated.
Didn't mind too much as the client is a repeat client and knows and trusts me and has given me plenty of work over the last year or so.
Good job 👍🏼 Have you considered motion sensor bulbs in the passageways?
I like how we speak the same language but use different phrases & terms. we condense the sentence and just say trim. we very rarely say timber, once milled we say lumber. we do say frame, framed, etc ... oh & we work the crap out of the word ain't too. I like how you all (ya'll) refurbish your homes. it's what honest decent people do. God bless the United Kingdom. 🇬🇧
Cheers and greetings to our friends across the pond! I must admit I prefer to call it trim but nobody knows what I'm talking about over here 😁👍🛠️
@@GosforthHandyman I apologize not my intent to tell you what to do or say. Just I thought that I could be a little bit informative stupid me to think every body else in the world is as obtuse as us(americans). just joking. I find the phrases, labelings & perspectives of our 2 countries wonderfully enlightening. that's the real reason I brought it up. meant no offense.
A thing I've missed from previous vids: what happened to the coal house? A 1920s house would not have been built without a coal house, some were actually inset into the house which may explain your mystery short internal walls. The house across the back from the house I grew up in had one of these inset jobs, it took up about a third of the kitchen. Sorry for asking so late.
Looking good sir the trials and tribulations of renovating an old property. I think it’s getting to the point where you need to consider a new build . You know what works and doesn’t . And obviously you can project manage such an undertaking , I’ve done similar renovations in the past but realised to late that time creeps up on you . So suddenly you haven’t the energy to go for the next big challenge , you have obviously a lot of talent so capitalist on it and become a director rather than a player . Best wishes and kind regards as always 😀👍👍👍
We've got the extension coming up but we'd certainly consider a self build one day. 👍😁
@@GosforthHandyman that’s the sprite 😀👍👍👍