• TG Timber Clad Ceiling - Edges

    From RJH@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jul 4 09:13:40 2025
    I've just put some cheap T&G pine cladding on a ceiling to cover up the mess that's there. Looks fine, but the edges where it meets the corners/walls need finishing.

    Any ideas for a cheap and effective way to do this? The gaps are too wide in places for caulk. I was thinking of cutting one of the boards down into 1cm strips, but I've used up all the long pieces.

    --
    Cheers, Rob, Sheffield UK

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  • From John Rumm@21:1/5 to RJH on Fri Jul 4 10:42:49 2025
    On 04/07/2025 10:13, RJH wrote:
    I've just put some cheap T&G pine cladding on a ceiling to cover up the mess that's there. Looks fine, but the edges where it meets the corners/walls need finishing.

    Any ideas for a cheap and effective way to do this? The gaps are too wide in places for caulk. I was thinking of cutting one of the boards down into 1cm strips, but I've used up all the long pieces.

    A small length of trim of some description - quadrant or cove or bevel?

    --
    Cheers,

    John.

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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to RJH on Fri Jul 4 11:14:12 2025
    On 04/07/2025 10:13, RJH wrote:
    I've just put some cheap T&G pine cladding on a ceiling to cover up the mess that's there. Looks fine, but the edges where it meets the corners/walls need finishing.

    Any ideas for a cheap and effective way to do this? The gaps are too wide in places for caulk. I was thinking of cutting one of the boards down into 1cm strips, but I've used up all the long pieces.

    Normal practice is to use a ramin wooden moulding strip

    https://www.melbros.com/product-page/ramin-scotia-moulding-18mm-x-18mm-x-2-4m

    The sheds used to sell such...

    --
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  • From Thomas Prufer@21:1/5 to RJH on Fri Jul 4 12:46:39 2025
    On Fri, 4 Jul 2025 09:13:40 -0000 (UTC), RJH <patchmoney@gmx.com> wrote:

    I've just put some cheap T&G pine cladding on a ceiling to cover up the mess >that's there. Looks fine, but the edges where it meets the corners/walls need >finishing.

    Any ideas for a cheap and effective way to do this? The gaps are too wide in >places for caulk. I was thinking of cutting one of the boards down into 1cm >strips, but I've used up all the long pieces.

    Cut a "shadow gap"?

    https://youtu.be/ZehZdAdMi8M?feature=shared


    Thomas Prufer

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  • From RJH@21:1/5 to Thomas Prufer on Fri Jul 4 11:44:33 2025
    On 4 Jul 2025 at 11:46:39 BST, Thomas Prufer wrote:

    On Fri, 4 Jul 2025 09:13:40 -0000 (UTC), RJH <patchmoney@gmx.com> wrote:

    I've just put some cheap T&G pine cladding on a ceiling to cover up the mess >> that's there. Looks fine, but the edges where it meets the corners/walls need
    finishing.

    Any ideas for a cheap and effective way to do this? The gaps are too wide in >> places for caulk. I was thinking of cutting one of the boards down into 1cm >> strips, but I've used up all the long pieces.

    Cut a "shadow gap"?

    https://youtu.be/ZehZdAdMi8M?feature=shared


    Impressive. Must get me one of those. But meantime, given the uneven walls, I'll go with the moulding suggestions upthread.

    --
    Cheers, Rob, Sheffield UK

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  • From John Rumm@21:1/5 to RJH on Fri Jul 4 14:58:17 2025
    On 04/07/2025 12:44, RJH wrote:
    On 4 Jul 2025 at 11:46:39 BST, Thomas Prufer wrote:

    On Fri, 4 Jul 2025 09:13:40 -0000 (UTC), RJH <patchmoney@gmx.com> wrote:

    I've just put some cheap T&G pine cladding on a ceiling to cover up the mess
    that's there. Looks fine, but the edges where it meets the corners/walls need
    finishing.

    Any ideas for a cheap and effective way to do this? The gaps are too wide in
    places for caulk. I was thinking of cutting one of the boards down into 1cm >>> strips, but I've used up all the long pieces.

    Cut a "shadow gap"?

    https://youtu.be/ZehZdAdMi8M?feature=shared


    Impressive. Must get me one of those. But meantime, given the uneven walls, I'll go with the moulding suggestions upthread.

    Normally if I need a bit of trim like, I just knock up what I need on a
    router table...

    That means you can also choose what wood species you want should it need
    to be matching or contrasting with the ceiling boards.

    --
    Cheers,

    John.

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  • From alan_m@21:1/5 to John Rumm on Fri Jul 4 15:27:13 2025
    On 04/07/2025 14:58, John Rumm wrote:


    Normally if I need a bit of trim like, I just knock up what I need on a router table...

    That means you can also choose what wood species you want should it need
    to be matching or contrasting with the ceiling boards.


    The other thing to watch is the flatness/trueness of the walls. If the
    edging is not flexible enough to match the undulations in the wall you
    will also end up with a noticeable gap to the wall. Unless this can
    filled with something that can match the colour of the trim or the
    colour of the wall you may not be able to disguise it well. A filler or
    glue loaded with pine sawdust to match a pine trim could work.

    Start with putting a long straight edge (long spirit level) against the
    wall at ceiling height to see if you are still going to end up with
    smaller gaps.

    I once had this type of problem when trying to add ceiling coving in a
    house built over 100 years ago. In the end I gave up with this as no
    wall was true or flat and no corner at 90 degrees.

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  • From Thomas Prufer@21:1/5 to RJH on Sat Jul 5 10:41:09 2025
    On Fri, 4 Jul 2025 11:44:33 -0000 (UTC), RJH <patchmoney@gmx.com> wrote:

    On 4 Jul 2025 at 11:46:39 BST, Thomas Prufer wrote:

    On Fri, 4 Jul 2025 09:13:40 -0000 (UTC), RJH <patchmoney@gmx.com> wrote:

    I've just put some cheap T&G pine cladding on a ceiling to cover up the mess
    that's there. Looks fine, but the edges where it meets the corners/walls need
    finishing.

    Any ideas for a cheap and effective way to do this? The gaps are too wide in
    places for caulk. I was thinking of cutting one of the boards down into 1cm >>> strips, but I've used up all the long pieces.

    Cut a "shadow gap"?

    https://youtu.be/ZehZdAdMi8M?feature=shared


    Impressive. Must get me one of those. But meantime, given the uneven walls, >I'll go with the moulding suggestions upthread.

    The saw follows the wall, so the gap is (pretty much) the same all round.

    Instead of that dedicated tool, a biscuit jointer works as well, and has more uses than a specialized saw you might only use once.

    Thomas Prufer

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  • From RJH@21:1/5 to Thomas Prufer on Sat Jul 5 08:45:33 2025
    On 5 Jul 2025 at 09:41:09 BST, Thomas Prufer wrote:

    On Fri, 4 Jul 2025 11:44:33 -0000 (UTC), RJH <patchmoney@gmx.com> wrote:

    On 4 Jul 2025 at 11:46:39 BST, Thomas Prufer wrote:

    On Fri, 4 Jul 2025 09:13:40 -0000 (UTC), RJH <patchmoney@gmx.com> wrote: >>>
    I've just put some cheap T&G pine cladding on a ceiling to cover up the mess
    that's there. Looks fine, but the edges where it meets the corners/walls need
    finishing.

    Any ideas for a cheap and effective way to do this? The gaps are too wide in
    places for caulk. I was thinking of cutting one of the boards down into 1cm
    strips, but I've used up all the long pieces.

    Cut a "shadow gap"?

    https://youtu.be/ZehZdAdMi8M?feature=shared


    Impressive. Must get me one of those. But meantime, given the uneven walls, >> I'll go with the moulding suggestions upthread.

    The saw follows the wall, so the gap is (pretty much) the same all round.

    I can see it could look neat - and would help with the wood expanding/contracting.

    Instead of that dedicated tool, a biscuit jointer works as well, and has more uses than a specialized saw you might only use once.


    I used to have a biscuit jointer, and used it for a number of things - routing skirting gaps for flooring ISTR. Not often for biscuits for some reason.


    --
    Cheers, Rob, Sheffield UK

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  • From alan_m@21:1/5 to Thomas Prufer on Sat Jul 5 13:58:44 2025
    On 05/07/2025 09:41, Thomas Prufer wrote:

    The saw follows the wall,

    Only if the wall is substantially flat.

    --
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  • From Thomas Prufer@21:1/5 to junk@admac.myzen.co.uk on Sun Jul 6 07:59:27 2025
    On Sat, 5 Jul 2025 13:58:44 +0100, alan_m <junk@admac.myzen.co.uk> wrote:

    On 05/07/2025 09:41, Thomas Prufer wrote:

    The saw follows the wall,

    Only if the wall is substantially flat.

    The flat bit of the saw evens out the high-frequency bumps, and follows the wall
    as well as a base of 15 to 20 cm will. And beading or a strip won't smooth out much less, so it's either something like Styrofoam beading that is very flexible, or some sort of filler or caulk.

    And looking at the gap, a variation from 12 to 15 mm or even 22-25 mm is less distracting than one of 0-3 mm.

    Thomas Prufer

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  • From TimW@21:1/5 to RJH on Thu Jul 10 14:28:08 2025
    On 04/07/2025 10:13, RJH wrote:
    I've just put some cheap T&G pine cladding on a ceiling to cover up the mess that's there. Looks fine, but the edges where it meets the corners/walls need finishing.

    Any ideas for a cheap and effective way to do this? The gaps are too wide in places for caulk. I was thinking of cutting one of the boards down into 1cm strips, but I've used up all the long pieces.


    Yes a little piece of trim, timber or other is the only practical way.
    You may want to paint it first (wall paint) then caulk the crack/gap
    then paint the caulk and you have no cutting in to do with a paintbrush.
    You may want to use some other material. A scotia moulding is nice, or
    just a chamfer.

    TW

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  • From RJH@21:1/5 to TimW on Fri Jul 11 07:33:24 2025
    On 10 Jul 2025 at 14:28:08 BST, TimW wrote:

    On 04/07/2025 10:13, RJH wrote:
    I've just put some cheap T&G pine cladding on a ceiling to cover up the mess >> that's there. Looks fine, but the edges where it meets the corners/walls need
    finishing.

    Any ideas for a cheap and effective way to do this? The gaps are too wide in >> places for caulk. I was thinking of cutting one of the boards down into 1cm >> strips, but I've used up all the long pieces.


    Yes a little piece of trim, timber or other is the only practical way.
    You may want to paint it first (wall paint) then caulk the crack/gap
    then paint the caulk and you have no cutting in to do with a paintbrush.
    You may want to use some other material. A scotia moulding is nice, or
    just a chamfer.


    Thanks - I've bought a few lengths of 18mm rounded moulding. It'll cover the gaps between the cladding and walls, but I had undertimated the unevenness of one of the walls. So there'll be a bit of filling going on. Currently
    'thinking about next steps' . . .

    I've got some grab adhesive to fix the moulding - how best to hold it in place until the glue sets?

    --
    Cheers, Rob, Sheffield UK

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  • From Timatmarford@21:1/5 to RJH on Fri Jul 11 09:36:40 2025
    On 11/07/2025 08:33, RJH wrote:
    On 10 Jul 2025 at 14:28:08 BST, TimW wrote:

    On 04/07/2025 10:13, RJH wrote:
    I've just put some cheap T&G pine cladding on a ceiling to cover up the mess
    that's there. Looks fine, but the edges where it meets the corners/walls need
    finishing.

    Any ideas for a cheap and effective way to do this? The gaps are too wide in
    places for caulk. I was thinking of cutting one of the boards down into 1cm >>> strips, but I've used up all the long pieces.


    Yes a little piece of trim, timber or other is the only practical way.
    You may want to paint it first (wall paint) then caulk the crack/gap
    then paint the caulk and you have no cutting in to do with a paintbrush.
    You may want to use some other material. A scotia moulding is nice, or
    just a chamfer.


    Thanks - I've bought a few lengths of 18mm rounded moulding. It'll cover the gaps between the cladding and walls, but I had undertimated the unevenness of one of the walls. So there'll be a bit of filling going on. Currently 'thinking about next steps' . . .

    I've got some grab adhesive to fix the moulding - how best to hold it in place
    until the glue sets?

    I cut a flock of thin laths to secure something similar in a bathroom.
    Looked a bit Winter forestry but worked.

    No doubt someone will be along with a more technical solution:-)


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  • From The Natural Philosopher@21:1/5 to RJH on Fri Jul 11 10:37:48 2025
    On 11/07/2025 08:33, RJH wrote:
    On 10 Jul 2025 at 14:28:08 BST, TimW wrote:

    On 04/07/2025 10:13, RJH wrote:
    I've just put some cheap T&G pine cladding on a ceiling to cover up the mess
    that's there. Looks fine, but the edges where it meets the corners/walls need
    finishing.

    Any ideas for a cheap and effective way to do this? The gaps are too wide in
    places for caulk. I was thinking of cutting one of the boards down into 1cm >>> strips, but I've used up all the long pieces.


    Yes a little piece of trim, timber or other is the only practical way.
    You may want to paint it first (wall paint) then caulk the crack/gap
    then paint the caulk and you have no cutting in to do with a paintbrush.
    You may want to use some other material. A scotia moulding is nice, or
    just a chamfer.


    Thanks - I've bought a few lengths of 18mm rounded moulding. It'll cover the gaps between the cladding and walls, but I had undertimated the unevenness of one of the walls. So there'll be a bit of filling going on. Currently 'thinking about next steps' . . .

    I've got some grab adhesive to fix the moulding - how best to hold it in place
    until the glue sets?

    wedge timbers against the floor

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    kind word alone.

    Al Capone

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  • From RJH@21:1/5 to The Natural Philosopher on Fri Jul 11 10:43:09 2025
    On 11 Jul 2025 at 10:37:48 BST, The Natural Philosopher wrote:

    On 11/07/2025 08:33, RJH wrote:
    On 10 Jul 2025 at 14:28:08 BST, TimW wrote:

    On 04/07/2025 10:13, RJH wrote:
    I've just put some cheap T&G pine cladding on a ceiling to cover up the mess
    that's there. Looks fine, but the edges where it meets the corners/walls need
    finishing.

    Any ideas for a cheap and effective way to do this? The gaps are too wide in
    places for caulk. I was thinking of cutting one of the boards down into 1cm
    strips, but I've used up all the long pieces.


    Yes a little piece of trim, timber or other is the only practical way.
    You may want to paint it first (wall paint) then caulk the crack/gap
    then paint the caulk and you have no cutting in to do with a paintbrush. >>> You may want to use some other material. A scotia moulding is nice, or
    just a chamfer.


    Thanks - I've bought a few lengths of 18mm rounded moulding. It'll cover the >> gaps between the cladding and walls, but I had undertimated the unevenness of
    one of the walls. So there'll be a bit of filling going on. Currently
    'thinking about next steps' . . .

    I've got some grab adhesive to fix the moulding - how best to hold it in place
    until the glue sets?

    wedge timbers against the floor

    Yes, I'll give it a go. 2.8m ceiling so a bit more awkward than usual . . .

    --
    Cheers, Rob, Sheffield UK

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  • From RJH@21:1/5 to Timatmarford on Fri Jul 11 10:44:50 2025
    On 11 Jul 2025 at 09:36:40 BST, Timatmarford wrote:

    On 11/07/2025 08:33, RJH wrote:
    On 10 Jul 2025 at 14:28:08 BST, TimW wrote:

    On 04/07/2025 10:13, RJH wrote:
    I've just put some cheap T&G pine cladding on a ceiling to cover up the mess
    that's there. Looks fine, but the edges where it meets the corners/walls need
    finishing.

    Any ideas for a cheap and effective way to do this? The gaps are too wide in
    places for caulk. I was thinking of cutting one of the boards down into 1cm
    strips, but I've used up all the long pieces.


    Yes a little piece of trim, timber or other is the only practical way.
    You may want to paint it first (wall paint) then caulk the crack/gap
    then paint the caulk and you have no cutting in to do with a paintbrush. >>> You may want to use some other material. A scotia moulding is nice, or
    just a chamfer.


    Thanks - I've bought a few lengths of 18mm rounded moulding. It'll cover the >> gaps between the cladding and walls, but I had undertimated the unevenness of
    one of the walls. So there'll be a bit of filling going on. Currently
    'thinking about next steps' . . .

    I've got some grab adhesive to fix the moulding - how best to hold it in place
    until the glue sets?

    I cut a flock of thin laths to secure something similar in a bathroom.
    Looked a bit Winter forestry but worked.

    No doubt someone will be along with a more technical solution:-)


    No no, that's what I'd planned originally, cutting up lengths of offcut cladding. But I've gone posh and bought some wooden moulding strips now . . . --
    Cheers, Rob, Sheffield UK

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