Clayton DeKorne
Expert advice from start to
finish
Learn how to get tight miters and crisp
details when casing doors and windows, running baseboard, and
putting up crown molding. Trim Carpentry and Built-Ins
shows you how to get professional results with all of your common
trim projects.
Among the latest in Taunton's Build Like
a Pro series, Trim Carpentry and Built-Ins is filled with
trade secrets and tried-and-true methods from carpenter and author
Clayton DeKorne's 25 years in the industry.
Detailed instructions with hundreds of
photos and drawings can help you overcome challenges like
out-of-square walls, floors, and ceilings. You'll also learn how to
design and build custom built-in bookcases and cabinets to enhance
any room in the house.
This book brings you:
- professional tips and trade secrets for installing trim with
precision
- advice on common trim projects, including window and door
casing, baseboards, crown molding, and wainscoting
- detailed instructions for built-in bookcases and cabinets
Introduction:
This book is written for anyone interested
in becoming a good carpenter. I have set out to provide readers with
a sense of what to expect when they gather the tools and materials
to undertake an interior trim job. I have poured into these pages my
insights about how materials behave over time, collected design
details that will look good over the long term, and disclosed many
trade tips that other professional carpenters have shared with me
during the past 25 years.
Carpentry books often fail, I think, when they try to cover every
conceivable way to accomplish a task. The result is a mass of
information that is boiled down into neat but irrelevant categories
or tucked into bland generalities that wander away from the actual
experience of completing a carpentry job. In this volume, I have
tried to avoid giving too much general information. Instead, I've
focused on a few methods that have worked well for me as a
professional trim carpenter.
Trim carpentry, as I address it here, refers to any kind of interior
woodwork in a house, including door and window casings, baseboards,
crown and ceiling moldings, wainscoting and other wooden wall
paneling, cabinets, and built-in furniture. This book covers most
types of "finish" woodwork -- the carpentry details that are
addressed before the painting and decorating begins. This book does
not include specific details about the installation of doors and
windows (which are better handled as part of the building envelope)
or stairways (which are complex enough to comprise an entire book).
Overall, this edition focuses on the mechanics of how trim fits
together. However, I feel strongly that no carpentry work can ever
be separated from design or from building science. Carpenters must
constantly make aesthetic decisions concerning proportion, scale,
texture, color, and pattern, and like every other aspect of the
trade, successful trim design is the result of conscious, informed
effort, not accident. Equally important, carpentry is always closely
tied to the physical properties of wood, which govern how it behaves
in a changing environment. Wood trim mechanics must always be
addressed from the perspective of dimensional stability. How much a
board moves dictates how tight a joint will remain.
With this in mind, I hope that anyone interested in becoming the
best carpenter possible strives to become a student of the house
building trades, including mechanics, aesthetics, and science in
equal measure. When you understand carpentry, there are no strict
boundaries among these perspectives -- they are each part of a whole
way of thinking that is inseparable from the actual work. Above all,
carpentry requires a way of thinking about the constructed world
that cannot be learned in a book. At some point, a reader must pick
up the tools and actively work with the materials. At that point, I
hope the principles and methods described here will make that
practice a richer experience.
As you read this book, bear in mind that I have written it from the
perspective of a professional carpenter, adopting a "trade"
perspective that equally values production and quality. Quality is
always a relative term. You can go nuts with quality in carpentry. I
have done jobs for customers who actually inspected miter joints
with a magnifying glass and for others who didn't particularly care
what the joinery looked like, as long as they could list "natural
hardwood trim" in a rental advertisement. Doing each job "well"
meant discerning completely different levels of quality.
The balance between production (getting the job done as efficiently
and inexpensively as possible) and quality (executing it as
elegantly and precisely as possible) sets a baseline for building
practice. It's a baseline that works equally well for aspiring
carpenters who wish to pursue the trade for its own sake and for
homeowners who want the work they do to last for the next
generation. That said, I feel confident that the methods described
in this book will allow you to satisfy that person holding the
magnifying glass, be it yourself, your supervisor, or your customer.
But more important, the methods described here will allow you to get
the work done.
About the author
Clayton DeKorne worked alongside his tradesman father until
he became a full carpenter at age 17. Over the next decade, he
advanced from lead carpenter to trim contractor before taking a
position as senior editor at the Journal of Light Construction
and later as founding editor of Tools of the Trade. He lives
in Burlington, Vermont.
Contents:
Introduction
How to Use This Book
1. Project Planning
Sketching a Design
Material Take-Offs
Pricing Materials
2. Trim Materials
Choosing Finish Lumber
Choosing Millwork
3. Trimming Windows
Trim Styles
Jamb Extensions
Picture-Framing a Window
Traditional Casing
4. Running Baseboard
Baseboard Layout
Cutting Baseboard
Installing Baseboard
5. Crown Molding
Crown Types
Prepping the Walls
Installation Strategy
Cutting Crown
Built-Up Crown Molding
6. Wainscoting
Designing Wainscoting
Installing Backer
Installing Tongue-and-Groove Wainscoting
Installing Modified Frame-and-Panel Wainscoting
Installing Chair Rail
7. Materials for Built-Ins
Plywood
Composite Panel Stock
8. Basic Bookshelves
Bookshelf Design
Building Cases
Installing Bookshelves
9. Built-In Cabinets
Designing Cabinets
Building Cabinet Cases
Drawer Construction
Countertops
Doors
Resources
Index
Soft-cover, 9-1/4 x 11 in., 176 pages,
with color photos and drawings Published 2002