03-31-2024, 05:22 PM
When laying out paneling in this style along one wall, it's easy to figure out proper spacing so you have even panel widths across the entire wall.
LOML wants this look around the perimeter of the powder room - all four walls. One wall has a door, so we've really got 3 different wall lengths to consider.
Do you treat each wall as its own thing, evenly sub-dividing the space, meaning the "panel widths" may vary on adjacent walls by an inch or two?
Or, do you pretend you laid out the entire perimeter as one wall, find the spacing and lay out the vertical boards so that all "panels" are the same width on all 4 walls, but that means that in some corners, there may be no vertical trim board at all if the "panel" actually spans/wraps the corner?
I hope I'm making sense!
thanks!
LOML wants this look around the perimeter of the powder room - all four walls. One wall has a door, so we've really got 3 different wall lengths to consider.
Do you treat each wall as its own thing, evenly sub-dividing the space, meaning the "panel widths" may vary on adjacent walls by an inch or two?
Or, do you pretend you laid out the entire perimeter as one wall, find the spacing and lay out the vertical boards so that all "panels" are the same width on all 4 walls, but that means that in some corners, there may be no vertical trim board at all if the "panel" actually spans/wraps the corner?
I hope I'm making sense!
thanks!