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Finish Carpentry and Trim Planning Guide

Material selection, profile options, and sequencing tips for baseboards, casing, and crown molding. For the Lexington, KY area.

January 20, 2026 5 min read | Bluegrass Finish
Installer wiring recessed lights in a kitchen ceiling.

Finish Carpentry and Trim Planning Guide

Finish carpentry—baseboards, casing, crown molding, and decorative trim—is where visible details matter. Tight miter joints, consistent reveals, and clean transitions between materials are what separate pro installs from amateur work.

Quick takeaways

  • Match material to use. MDF and primed pine for painted trim; hardwood for stained; avoid MDF in high-moisture areas.
  • Profile and scale matter. Baseboard height and casing width should suit the room and match existing trim when adding on.
  • Sequence with other trades. Trim typically goes after drywall and before or after paint depending on the finish.
  • Reveals and miters. Consistent gap at jambs and tight miters at corners define a pro install.

Material Selection

MDF (Medium-Density Fiberboard)

  • Cost-effective and paint-ready
  • Smooth surface that takes paint well
  • Consistent dimensions (no expansion/contraction issues)
  • Heavy and can be prone to damage from moisture
  • Best for: painted trim in low-moisture areas

Primed Pine/Poplar

  • Pre-primed boards reduce on-site prep time
  • Solid wood can be stained or painted
  • More care required with fastening (splitting prevention)
  • Best for: painted trim where cost-effectiveness matters

Solid Hardwood (Oak, Maple, Cherry)

  • Can be stained to show grain
  • More expensive than MDF or pine
  • Requires careful planning for expansion/contraction
  • Best for: stained trim, high-end installs

Finger-Jointed Pine

  • Multiple short pieces joined together
  • Cost-effective for painted applications
  • Not suitable for staining (joints will show)
  • Best for: painted trim on a budget

Profile Selection

Baseboards

  • Standard heights: 3.25”, 5.25”, 7.25”
  • Taller baseboards create a more formal look
  • Match existing trim if adding to one room
  • Consider floor height changes and clearances

Casing (Door & Window Trim)

  • Should be at least as wide as wall thickness
  • Profile should complement baseboard style
  • Miter joints for decorative profiles
  • Butt joints acceptable for simple flat casing

Crown Molding

  • Size proportional to ceiling height and room size
  • 8’ ceilings: 3-4” crown
  • 9-10’ ceilings: 4-6” crown
  • Can use multiple pieces (build-up) for larger profiles

Sequencing with Other Finishes

Standard Sequence:

  1. Drywall hung and finished
  2. Prime walls (optional but recommended)
  3. Install trim (unpainted or primed)
  4. Caulk gaps between trim and walls
  5. Final paint (walls and trim)

Primed Trim Sequence:

  1. Drywall hung and finished
  2. Install primed trim
  3. Caulk and fill nail holes
  4. Prime patches and caulk lines
  5. Final paint coat (walls and trim)

Installation Planning

Miter Joints

  • Most common for decorative profiles
  • Require accurate cuts (especially outside corners)
  • Caulk fills minor gaps but can’t fix bad cuts
  • Test fit before nailing

Cope Joints

  • Inside corners on crown and baseboard
  • More forgiving than miters for out-of-square walls
  • Takes more time but creates tighter joints
  • Professional installers prefer coping

Butt Joints

  • Simple flat trim (door casing, simple baseboards)
  • Faster to install than miters
  • Clean appearance for modern/minimalist styles

Common Planning Mistakes

Not accounting for floor height changes

  • Baseboards reveal affected by new flooring
  • Plan baseboard height for final floor level
  • May need to remove/reinstall after flooring

Mismatched profiles between rooms

  • Transitions between different trim styles look awkward
  • Match existing trim when adding to one area
  • Or plan whole-floor updates for consistency

Skipping priming strategy

  • Bare wood shows through paint
  • Nail holes and caulk lines flash differently
  • Prime patches and caulk before final coat

Not planning for reveals

  • Door casing should reveal edge of jamb (typically 1/8”-3/16”)
  • Inconsistent reveals look unprofessional
  • Measure and mark before installation

Caulk and Fill Strategy

What to caulk:

  • Gaps between trim and walls
  • Miter joints (small gaps only)
  • Butt joints on baseboards at inside corners

What to fill:

  • Nail holes
  • Countersunk screws (if used)

What NOT to caulk:

  • Miter joints on natural wood (use wood filler)
  • Gaps larger than 1/4” (rework the joint)

Paint vs. Stain Planning

Painted Trim:

  • MDF or primed pine most cost-effective
  • Fill nail holes after installation
  • Caulk all gaps before final paint
  • Two coats of paint minimum (primer + finish)

Stained Trim:

  • Pre-finish before installation if possible
  • Fill nail holes with color-matched putty
  • Do NOT caulk gaps (stain won’t match caulk)
  • Touch up stain/finish after installation

Cost and Timeline Planning

Material costs (per linear foot, approximate):

  • MDF baseboard: $1-3
  • Primed pine baseboard: $2-5
  • Solid hardwood baseboard: $5-15
  • Crown molding: $3-12+

Labor typically costs 2-3x material cost

Timeline (average room):

  • Baseboard only: 4-8 hours
  • Door casing (3-4 doors): 3-6 hours
  • Crown molding: 6-12 hours (depending on complexity)
  • Plus caulk, fill, and paint time

Questions to Ask Before Starting

  1. What material fits your budget and finish goals (paint vs. stain)?
  2. Are you matching existing trim or updating the whole space?
  3. What is the sequencing with flooring, drywall, and paint?
  4. Do you have the tools for accurate miter cuts?
  5. How will you handle inside corners (miter vs. cope)?

When to Hire a Pro

  • Complex crown molding installations
  • Matching historic or custom profiles
  • Large projects (whole house trim-out)
  • If you don’t have a miter saw and brad nailer
  • When tight, professional joints matter for the final look

Finish carpentry is where “close enough” isn’t good enough. Tight joints, consistent reveals, and clean paint lines are what create a professional finish. Plan materials, sequencing, and finish strategy before the first cut, and you’ll avoid the rework that turns a one-day job into a week-long project.

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