Decorative Interior Wall Panels - Wainscot
#11
There are all kinds of decorative interior wall panels that can be bought in large, thin sheets and glued to the walls of a room... but historically, the richest and most classic of wall treatments... is known as wainscot.

Our Client…

We had built a Mission Style fireplace mantle for them six months prior and they liked the look so much that they asked us to design that same look for wainscot to go in their foyer. They also saw some wainscot that was fairly tall (chest high) so I make a sketch that had panels stacked upon each other. I capped the paneling with a small shelf and included that cap detail for the doorways in their foyer, as well. Here is that sketch…



Here is my (only) ‘before picture’ where you see one of our crew members beginning to mark the walls for the panel’s height around the room.



Maintaining the Look…

Woodwork looks best when it has some shape and ‘texture’ to it …so we machined the lumber at different thicknesses so that the paneled walls didn’t appear flat (like a regular wall looks). You begin to get a sense of how this ended up from this photo of one of the doorways, taken from the side.



We used their existing doors and sanded them down to bare wood so that the stain and finish matched for all the woodwork. This picture shows the wainscot at 54” high.



Mission Style

This is a small nook off the foyer (more like a hallway) for 2 closets and the main entrance to the rest of their home. This really displays the look of Mission Style architecture, I think.



There was no easy way to photograph the whole project in a single photograph but I managed to capture a good deal of it using a panorama.



Besides the fireplace mantle (for which I’ve already written blog) and this wainscot, we also wrapped a number of beams & support columns as well as creating a staircase balustrade with newel post …. all in the same Mission Style architecture. I’ll be posting about those two projects soon.
"Courage is knowing what not to fear."
www.hudsoncabinetmaking.com
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#12
Absolutely gorgeous!! I wish that I had a house that this type of adornment could go in/
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#13
Lovely. Mind saying what the wood is and the finish? Ken
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#14
It's beautiful. I love those Craftsman interiors.
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#15
Very nice. Was going to do that to our house before we decided to move. I really like the wainscoting but few do these days. Often it's taken out of houses or painted.
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#16
Russell, I've never seen any of your work that wasn't a winner. Of course LOML and I both really enjoy the style you usually work in. Thanks for sharing.
Worst thing they can do is cook ya and eat ya

GW
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#17
That is beautiful, I love wood so rich looking, very nice job indeed.


Steve
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#18
Beautiful.

Due to an incredibly crappy grout job, I have a whole main house of tile to replace one day (with wood). When that happens, I'll need to take up the baseboard... which then gives me a good excuse to replace that and the cheap builder-grade door trim. The built-up look is what I'm after (altho painted).
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#19
Hi Russell - making paneled walls has been on my to-do list for some time.

Would you mind explaining what thicknesses you chose for the rails, stiles and panels themselves?

Also, how did you deal with integrating the paneling in with existing trimwork (I noticed that it looks like at least some of the casings were completely removed - maybe replaced with new?).

Finally, it appears that the 'baseboard' portion of the panel walls overlaps the casing? - is that traditional?

-Mark
If I had a signature, this wouldn't be it.
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#20
Beautiful work.
I love that style.
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