As we’ve gone through the process of remodeling our house one room at a time, we’ve become huge believers in the impact trimwork can have on elevating a space. We added panel moulding in our guest bedroom, highlighted the beadboard moulding in our main floor bathroom with a high contrast black and white palette, added crown moulding and baseboard moulding to our sunroom and even added crown moulding in our guest bathroom. It’s the finishing touch that takes a room to the next level.
For our recent remodel for the One Room Challenge, we paired with Metrie to bring trimwork to a space that is often forgotten: the bathroom. Our bathroom layout is long and narrow, with all the fixtures on one length of the room, meaning there’s a lot of exposed walls. This expanse of unused walls was begging for a special treatment to make them shine. I knew immediately that trimwork would be the way we could bring some detail to the walls.
Recessed wainscoting was the solution for this space for a handful of reasons:
- It’s so elegant and classic. There’s no fear of becoming tired of it, since it’s such a historical treatment that has withstood the passage of time.
- Raising the trimwork on the walls to match the depth of the tile in the shower allowed for a flat surface to run crown moulding across, tying the two areas together
- The trimwork would mirror the pencil tile we were planning on adding in the shower.
- The moulding could frame out a giant mirror over the vanity, making the space feel even more custom,
So, once we had decided wainscoting was the way to go, here are the steps we took:
1. Select your style of moulding.
Metrie offers five gorgeous collections that suit different aesthetics and styles of homes. We gravitated toward the Fashion Forward collection since it mirrored the classic lines throughout the rest of our home, but is also so chic and sophisticated.
2. Determine the types of moulding your space will require.
For wainscoting you need (and links to the ones we used):
- Baseboards – they should be flat on the top edge so the stiles slide right over them
- Stiles – the flat boards that are raised off the wall
- Casing for windows and doors – it needs to have a greater depth on the outside edges than your stiles so the casing stands out
- Fingerjoint Applied Moulding – this is the trimwork on the inside of the stiles that make up the decorative boxes
- Crown Moulding
The best aspect of the Metrie collections is that all the pieces work together and you don’t have to worry about the depths of the pieces not working perfectly in unison.
I’ve indicated below each of the pieces:
3. Make a detailed plan.
Of all the types of trim we’ve installed to date, this wainscoting required the most planning in advance. Since the stiles create a fixed border on everything, you have to put a lot of thought into placement. There are different widths of stiles, baseboards, crown moulding, etc. so planning can help you to understand what will work within your space.
We ended up creating a to-scale mock-up in Photoshop and played around with the different sized pieces until we got to a plan that worked for us. We were also cognizant of scale, since our ceilings are standard height and the room isn’t huge, it made sense for us to go with mostly the smallest sized trimwork (though it was still very chunky and substantial – perfectly proportioned to our space).
Below, you can see how we mapped out the trim.
We used the window as the anchor for the trim layout. First, we planned the casing around the window, then we used the bottom edge to set the horizontal middle stile. From there, we ran a stile along the top, added baseboards and the stile above. We added the vertical stiles on each side of the window and framed out the right-hand opening. We then mirrored the dimensions for the boxes in the shower. Since the space above the window wasn’t large enough for an opening, we filled it in with a stile.
This is the window wall, where we used the stiles to fill in the space above the doorway, since it wasn’t large enough for an opening. When we installed, we actually didn’t add the fingerjoint behind the vanity so it would sit flush against the wall.
The short wall was the simplest, with just a frame along the outside edges and one middle stile.
4. Install the trimwork
Once you’re armed with a plan, actually installing is fairly straightforward. The tools we used at this point were:
- Levels in an assortment of sizes – we used a 6-foot level on the longest sections, a 4-foot level where necessary, and a 2-foot level on the shortest runs. The goal is to use the level that’s closest in size where possible to keep your trim as straight as possible. We also used this laser level to set a guide for the entire width of the wall.
- A nail gun with finish nails, we use a compressor with ours, but I’ve heard excellent things about this electric nail gun
- A nail punch, to use with a hammer when nails don’t go as deep as you intended.
- A compound miter saw – we started out with this one and recently upgraded to this larger one (both are great, we just needed a larger blade for a few recent projects)
- Caulk plus this little tool that I loved using to smooth the caulk along the long seams
- Wood putty (though we later switched over the drywall spackle, which we discovered works better on MDF).
Since we had a lot of moving pieces happening at once, we didn’t install the trimwork in the order I’d recommend, which would be:
- Casings on windows and doors
- Baseboards around the room
- Horizontal stiles that run above the baseboards
- Horizontal stile that runs the middle length of the room
- Measure the distance down from the crown moulding and install the stile at the bottom edge of where the crown moulding will land
- Install the vertical stiles throughout
- Install crown moulding
This was our progression:
Drywall primed and ready to go.
Then we installed the casing, you can see how big a difference it makes.
Then first round of stiles up, set off the bottom edge of the window.
Then baseboards and bottom stiles.
5. Caulk the seams, edges and nailholes. Use wood putty and spackle to even out planes.
This is where you underestimate how much caulking needs to happen.
Here you can see we caulked and filled in between adding the applied fingerjoint moulding (as seen on the bottom box).
Then all the fingerjoint moulding went up.
6. Sand
Make sure everything is perfectly flat. Run your hand over all the seams and ensure you don’t feel any variance in the surface. You will see any imperfections after you paint.
7. Paint prep and paint!
Then we prepped for paint, by priming over the areas we had sanded. This was our first time painting a room with a spray gun and we learned a few things:
- It’s all about the prep. This part takes the longest by far, but once it’s done painting with a spray gun is so quick and easy.
- You use a LOT less paint. We bought two gallons of paint for this room and only ending up using about a half a gallon. Wow.
- Maintain the same distance from the wall across your entire stroke, even if it means flexing your wrist at the ends.
8. Hang your crown moulding*
Ideally you do this before you paint, but since we were hanging it over tile, we painted it in the garage and installed it painted. Then we caulked and touched up with a high density foam roller.
9. Admire your finished space
And that’s it! We’re obsessed with the final result and couldn’t be happier with our experience of working with the Metrie trimwork (and team!).
Thank you to Metrie for sponsoring this project – while the product was provided, all opinions are my own.