@@hmtrimworks7148 Note the gap on the mitered inside corner on the base molding prior to the crown install at the short outside corner near the beginning of the video. Scribing the inside corner rather than attempting to miter it would perfectly compensate for out of square inside corners and result in a perfect fit (no gap) when done properly. 44 years as a finish carpenter...I do know what I'm talking about.
@@edmessina8392That gap you’re talking about is easily fixed with a small shim in about a 10th of the time it will take to cope it. Ain’t nobody got time to cope, this is production work. • No matter what you do it’s still paint grade and it’s going to get a bead of caulk there no matter what. •I’ve been doing this since the mid 80’s and only coped a few houses because it just adds a unnecessary amount of time & labor with no benefits. • I mean coping is cool and all, but totally unnecessary if you know what you’re doing.
@@hmtrimworks7148 Looks like an occupied home to me. All these years I must have mistaken "production" work for low rent tract housing "its close enough" skillsets. It looked like one room to me. Coping it properly would have added less than one minute per inside corner with the proper tools at hand and since about half of the cuts become 90s when coped it's actually quicker when you know what you're doing...your words.
Is that Base molding under the Crown…I like that a lot.👍👍👍
That’s how we do it, base upside down
Thank you
"nothing a little caulk or filler caulk can't hide".....you guys need to learn to scribe.
Cool thanks for watching, please refer us to a video of how you do it .
You have no idea what you’re talking about.🙄
@@hmtrimworks7148 Note the gap on the mitered inside corner on the base molding prior to the crown install at the short outside corner near the beginning of the video. Scribing the inside corner rather than attempting to miter it would perfectly compensate for out of square inside corners and result in a perfect fit (no gap) when done properly. 44 years as a finish carpenter...I do know what I'm talking about.
@@edmessina8392That gap you’re talking about is easily fixed with a small shim in about a 10th of the time it will take to cope it. Ain’t nobody got time to cope, this is production work.
• No matter what you do it’s still paint grade and it’s going to get a bead of caulk there no matter what.
•I’ve been doing this since the mid 80’s and only coped a few houses because it just adds a unnecessary amount of time & labor with no benefits.
• I mean coping is cool and all, but totally unnecessary if you know what you’re doing.
@@hmtrimworks7148 Looks like an occupied home to me. All these years I must have mistaken "production" work for low rent tract housing "its close enough" skillsets.
It looked like one room to me. Coping it properly would have added less than one minute per inside corner with the proper tools at hand and since about half of the cuts become 90s when coped it's actually quicker when you know what you're doing...your words.