DIY Crown Molding Day 6: Fit and Finish

Wed, 12 March 2008, 10:41 am

Final Crown Molding Installed

To call the finishing stage of the crown molding project all one day is a bit of a misnomer. The reality is that it took small parts of about 4 days to caulk and do the finishing touches, all adding up to about a day worth of effort. I went around the room sealing the gaps between the molding and the ceiling and the molding and the wall with DAP Alex Plus Caulk. It is a latex caulk that can be painted. I also needed to fill in each inside corner, and the outside corners so that there were no visible gaps between the pieces of wood.

Perhaps the most challenging part of the finish work were the 3 joints in the room where I had didn’t have enough molding length to span the entire wall. On those joints as well as every place I had nailed, I used DAP Fast N’ Final Spackle. I put many thin coats of spackle on the joints, then let it dry, sanded and applied it again so that it would in theory disappear. Well, after about 4 layers, I gave up trying to get them all perfectly smooth. In retrospect I wish I had made tighter joints to begin with, but we learn.

After all of the filling was complete I took out the trim paint and painted over the caulk and spackle. My last step was to take out the wall paint and touch up any spots on the wall where white caulk was too visible.

Finito
The best part of the project is that it is now done. The results are great. It looks like the crown molding has been there all along, and really provides some nice architectural detail for the room. The project wasn’t overly difficult. It just took patience and a tolerance for having the house and garage in disarray for about a week. The total bill for the project was probably about $250 which included molding, paint, screws, caulk, book, angle measuring tool, etc. It will probably be a bit before I do another room, as I want to let the memories of coping corners fade a bit, but I wouldn’t hesitate.

DIY Crown Molding Project: Day 1 | Day 2 | Day 3 | Day 4,5 | Day 6

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Read: 7 comments on “DIY Crown Molding Day 6: Fit and Finish”

  • 1 RaiulBaztepo 28 March 2009

    Hello!
    Very Interesting post! Thank you for such interesting resource!
    PS: Sorry for my bad english, I’v just started to learn this language ;)
    See you!
    Your, Raiul Baztepo

  • 2 Mark Brannan 30 October 2009

    I feel your pain after now crown molding all my downstairs rooms. The first room made me want to jump out of the window but then my wife saw a great tool on qvc. I laughed when I saw it but she ordered it .It is the magic mitre. i kid you not , my second room only 13ft x13ft took just over 3 hours ising this tool. There are restrictions on molding size as I only used 4inch molding but at least there is no reason to guess the angle.

  • 3 Milan Jara 09 January 2010

    Hi Kris,

    I love your story. That is just the way the is just the way the crown is done. Fail your self to success. Isn’t that fun to go in and out with a 16 footer several times just to find out that you are wrong again? I did a lot of crown over the years but what is really hard is cathedral ceiling. Or atleast I felt like it. Probably because I have done only 2 ceilings like that.

  • 4 Milan Jara 09 January 2010

    I love your finished Crown Molding

  • 5 Alex 27 January 2010

    I’m doing my living room with crown now, and it’s very validating to hear your suffering. I regret now my lust for 9 foot ceilings..though at least Lowes was selling the crown I wanted in 8 foot sections for the same price per linear foot, making the multiple trips to the garage a little more bearable. This weekend is the sanding/caulking/painting/finishing time! At least there is “finish” in there somewhere..

  • 6 Crystal Atkinson 02 June 2011

    I really love the paint color in this photo, does anyone know what it is? I know this is an old photo but I’m hoping to get lucky and get a response!

  • 7 Kris Rzepkowski 02 June 2011

    Hi Crystal, the paint color on the walls is Benjamin Moore Stratton Blue in Eggshell finish. Thanks for your question! -Kris

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