How to fill a gap behind plastic baseboard












8















I’ve added a waterproof plastic baseboard. Cut the angle at the door join at 45 deg which shows a predominant gap. I could just caulk it, but it would look terrible. What would be a good filler that wont crack and can be sanded and painted?



enter image description here










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Too late to be an answer, but I'd have brought it to the door jamb and then cut it at 90 degrees, and used caulk or filler to make the cross-grain cut smooth before painting.

    – Criggie
    2 days ago











  • By a piece of self-stick vinyl floor tile of the appropriate color, cut a piece to fit, and glue it on.

    – Hot Licks
    yesterday
















8















I’ve added a waterproof plastic baseboard. Cut the angle at the door join at 45 deg which shows a predominant gap. I could just caulk it, but it would look terrible. What would be a good filler that wont crack and can be sanded and painted?



enter image description here










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Too late to be an answer, but I'd have brought it to the door jamb and then cut it at 90 degrees, and used caulk or filler to make the cross-grain cut smooth before painting.

    – Criggie
    2 days ago











  • By a piece of self-stick vinyl floor tile of the appropriate color, cut a piece to fit, and glue it on.

    – Hot Licks
    yesterday














8












8








8








I’ve added a waterproof plastic baseboard. Cut the angle at the door join at 45 deg which shows a predominant gap. I could just caulk it, but it would look terrible. What would be a good filler that wont crack and can be sanded and painted?



enter image description here










share|improve this question
















I’ve added a waterproof plastic baseboard. Cut the angle at the door join at 45 deg which shows a predominant gap. I could just caulk it, but it would look terrible. What would be a good filler that wont crack and can be sanded and painted?



enter image description here







baseboard






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 days ago









Machavity

6,65011634




6,65011634










asked 2 days ago









Tchai QuentinTchai Quentin

4612




4612








  • 1





    Too late to be an answer, but I'd have brought it to the door jamb and then cut it at 90 degrees, and used caulk or filler to make the cross-grain cut smooth before painting.

    – Criggie
    2 days ago











  • By a piece of self-stick vinyl floor tile of the appropriate color, cut a piece to fit, and glue it on.

    – Hot Licks
    yesterday














  • 1





    Too late to be an answer, but I'd have brought it to the door jamb and then cut it at 90 degrees, and used caulk or filler to make the cross-grain cut smooth before painting.

    – Criggie
    2 days ago











  • By a piece of self-stick vinyl floor tile of the appropriate color, cut a piece to fit, and glue it on.

    – Hot Licks
    yesterday








1




1





Too late to be an answer, but I'd have brought it to the door jamb and then cut it at 90 degrees, and used caulk or filler to make the cross-grain cut smooth before painting.

– Criggie
2 days ago





Too late to be an answer, but I'd have brought it to the door jamb and then cut it at 90 degrees, and used caulk or filler to make the cross-grain cut smooth before painting.

– Criggie
2 days ago













By a piece of self-stick vinyl floor tile of the appropriate color, cut a piece to fit, and glue it on.

– Hot Licks
yesterday





By a piece of self-stick vinyl floor tile of the appropriate color, cut a piece to fit, and glue it on.

– Hot Licks
yesterday










9 Answers
9






active

oldest

votes


















40














You should really do a mitered return on that edge and terminate it into the wall. It will require a 45 cut in the opposite direction and a small piece, also cut at a 45 to fill the gap to the wall.



enter image description here



Here is an example






share|improve this answer

































    26














    Gary Bak's answer is good. You can also do an angled return if you wish to ease the transition a bit. This involves a 22-1/2° angle on the main piece, and one 22-1/2° and one 45° on the return piece. Watch your fingers!



    enter image description here



    image source






    share|improve this answer


























    • These look good, but I’ve already glued/nailed the baseboard down. Just need to fill the gap, sand and paint. Won’t look as good, but I think I can still get it to look decent. What would be a good fill material?

      – Tchai Quentin
      2 days ago






    • 5





      It wouldn't be that difficult to cut the angle the opposite way on the installed piece. Since you're caulking anyway it doesn't have to be perfect.

      – isherwood
      2 days ago











    • @TchaiQuentin: I'd replace it and do it right, but if you want to make it look good without taking it out, you could get some acrylic resin for automotive body repair and build out the missing material, then carve the return (like in Gary Bak's answer) using a rotary tool or the old fashioned way. All the (finished wood) returns on my home's lower window casing, and some other trim parts, were done this way, and I was able to duplicate it easily (on other wood parts, but the process should be similar for filler material) when I needed to.

      – R..
      yesterday





















    13














    Any non-shrinking wood putty should do. Elmers, Minwax, and Durham's offer good products. You could also use a setting-type joint compound, such as Durabond.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 4





      Automotive Bondo works wonders with wood as well. Dries fast and sands well.

      – Gary Bak
      2 days ago



















    3














    I would cut a piece of wood to fill as much of the gap as possible ( can be secured with either adhesive and/or nailed into place ). You can then fill the remaining small gaps with your choice of wood putty and sand/paint.






    share|improve this answer































      2














      The Right Way to terminate baseboard is without any return or diagonal cuts, running it into plinth block at the bottom of the door casing. If you want to do this, you can probably do a 45-degree cut the opposite direction on a piece of leftover baseboard material to replace/extend what you already cut and cover up the seam when you paint.



      Short of that, you can achieve a result like Gary Bak's answer (which also looks nice) without ripping out what you've done. I see two ways to do it:




      1. Build up the missing material with filler (I'd use acrylic resin for automotive body repair, but other materials would work too), carve a return to match the baseboard design using a rotary tool with carving bits or unpowered carving tools, and sand it smooth with the existing baseboard before painting. Or,


      2. Prepare a short (e.g. 1-2") piece of baseboard with the mitered return as described in Gark Bak's answer, cut off just enough of the end of your work (including the whole 45-degree part) in-place, and glue the attach the replacement in.







      share|improve this answer
























      • This is a Right Way™ to do it, especially if you already have a square cut plinth block at the bottom of your door trim. However, the picture in the OP shows that he does not have a plinth block there, but instead has Standard cheap American door trim™ which would require a different finishing technique.

        – FreeMan
        yesterday






      • 1





        @FreeMan: Indeed, but I think it's still worth mentioning because if OP has a need for waterproof baseboard (looks like a basement with flooding risk?) then getting something waterproof (a plastic or other artificial material plinth block) at the base of the door casing would probably be a really good idea too.

        – R..
        yesterday



















      2














      Another option is to just add a decorative base block moulding. They are available in a variety prices and styles. This would look nice and work well if you are not skilled enough to do the mitered solutions cough like me cough suggested in other answers.



      Here's a link to one at a big box store.






      share|improve this answer

































        1















        I could just caulk it, but it would look terrible.




        If you caulk the top of the baseboard(gives it a cleaner look) then you can caulk this side easily and it won't look out of place. A tube of basic white caulk doesn't cost a lot.






        share|improve this answer



















        • 3





          It'll shrink badly in that large void, though.

          – isherwood
          2 days ago






        • 2





          Yeah, might need some of your putty answer first

          – Machavity
          2 days ago











        • First yes, but then caluk second.

          – Mazura
          2 days ago



















        0














        I would add a plinth block (as mentioned also in R.'s answer). If you have a moisture issue in this room you could get one made of waterproof material, and you will have a more finished look when you're done.



        If you measure and cut very carefully you can do this without removing the existing trim (other than what you're replacing with the block).



        Illustration showing where to cut trim and place plinth block




        1. Choose a block that's taller than your baseboard (around 2 inches/5 cm is standard, but I've seen blocks that were both shorter and taller than that) and wider than your door trim (1/4" or probably 1/2 cm wider is standard, but you may need to go a little bit wider than that to make sure you can cover the gap left when you cut off the beveled part of the baseboard) and deeper than both. If you have plinth blocks elsewhere in your house try to find something that is similar, or if there's a particular style of trim that you're adding in this room you could coordinate with that. Otherwise, something fairly plain will draw the least attention.

        2. Measure your block and the space two or three times, and mark where you want to cut across the door molding and baseboard. Measure up from the floor on both sides of the casing. I would set the block in place and eyeball my marks, too, just to make sure there isn't anything wonky with the floor (but I've only done this in really old houses, where there's always something wonky with the floor). If you have to err, err a bit on the side of cutting less, since you can always cut more.

        3. Use a hand pull-saw or something like a dremel to very carefully cut through the trim, being careful not to mar the floor or wall. (If you have room, you might want to slide a piece of cardboard or something like a floppy plastic notebook cover between the trim and the floor.) These will be 90° cuts, perpendicular to the wall.

        4. Carefully remove the trim from the wall. You may want to score behind it with a utility knife, and use a putty knife to help pry it free. It's OK if there's a little bit of damage to the paint behind the trim you're removing, because the block will cover it, but you don't want damage that extends beyond what the plinth can cover.

        5. Pull leftover nails and clean any glue or excess paint off the wall, so you have a smooth-ish surface. Again, dings behind the block will be hidden, but you want it to be able to lay smooth against the wall so you don't want nail heads or anything else protruding.

        6. Set your block in place. Typically it would be centered on the casing, but you may need to have it be wider on the outside of the door (toward the baseboard) to fill your gap. If it fits, great! Attach it as you would other trim, caulk, and finish. If it's a bit too large, you can either sand the existing trim or the block (or both) so that it fits. Hopefully you won't have much of a gap, but if you do this installation is pretty forgiving of filling and caulking—one of the purposes of these blocks is to disguise less-than-perfectly-true dimensions, and to avoid the need for precision angle cuts.






        share|improve this answer































          0














          The base block and miter solutions already proposed are certainly the prettiest answers. If you really want to use a filler, a coworker of mine has used Kwik-Poly. It mixes like a 2-part epoxy and will sand and work like wood once it's hard and is paintable.






          share|improve this answer








          New contributor




          Solz is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.




















            Your Answer








            StackExchange.ready(function() {
            var channelOptions = {
            tags: "".split(" "),
            id: "73"
            };
            initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

            StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
            // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
            if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
            StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
            createEditor();
            });
            }
            else {
            createEditor();
            }
            });

            function createEditor() {
            StackExchange.prepareEditor({
            heartbeatType: 'answer',
            autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
            convertImagesToLinks: false,
            noModals: true,
            showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
            reputationToPostImages: null,
            bindNavPrevention: true,
            postfix: "",
            imageUploader: {
            brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
            contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
            allowUrls: true
            },
            noCode: true, onDemand: true,
            discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
            ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
            });


            }
            });














            draft saved

            draft discarded


















            StackExchange.ready(
            function () {
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fdiy.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f154454%2fhow-to-fill-a-gap-behind-plastic-baseboard%23new-answer', 'question_page');
            }
            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown

























            9 Answers
            9






            active

            oldest

            votes








            9 Answers
            9






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            40














            You should really do a mitered return on that edge and terminate it into the wall. It will require a 45 cut in the opposite direction and a small piece, also cut at a 45 to fill the gap to the wall.



            enter image description here



            Here is an example






            share|improve this answer






























              40














              You should really do a mitered return on that edge and terminate it into the wall. It will require a 45 cut in the opposite direction and a small piece, also cut at a 45 to fill the gap to the wall.



              enter image description here



              Here is an example






              share|improve this answer




























                40












                40








                40







                You should really do a mitered return on that edge and terminate it into the wall. It will require a 45 cut in the opposite direction and a small piece, also cut at a 45 to fill the gap to the wall.



                enter image description here



                Here is an example






                share|improve this answer















                You should really do a mitered return on that edge and terminate it into the wall. It will require a 45 cut in the opposite direction and a small piece, also cut at a 45 to fill the gap to the wall.



                enter image description here



                Here is an example







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited 2 days ago









                isherwood

                45.7k454117




                45.7k454117










                answered 2 days ago









                Gary BakGary Bak

                96147




                96147

























                    26














                    Gary Bak's answer is good. You can also do an angled return if you wish to ease the transition a bit. This involves a 22-1/2° angle on the main piece, and one 22-1/2° and one 45° on the return piece. Watch your fingers!



                    enter image description here



                    image source






                    share|improve this answer


























                    • These look good, but I’ve already glued/nailed the baseboard down. Just need to fill the gap, sand and paint. Won’t look as good, but I think I can still get it to look decent. What would be a good fill material?

                      – Tchai Quentin
                      2 days ago






                    • 5





                      It wouldn't be that difficult to cut the angle the opposite way on the installed piece. Since you're caulking anyway it doesn't have to be perfect.

                      – isherwood
                      2 days ago











                    • @TchaiQuentin: I'd replace it and do it right, but if you want to make it look good without taking it out, you could get some acrylic resin for automotive body repair and build out the missing material, then carve the return (like in Gary Bak's answer) using a rotary tool or the old fashioned way. All the (finished wood) returns on my home's lower window casing, and some other trim parts, were done this way, and I was able to duplicate it easily (on other wood parts, but the process should be similar for filler material) when I needed to.

                      – R..
                      yesterday


















                    26














                    Gary Bak's answer is good. You can also do an angled return if you wish to ease the transition a bit. This involves a 22-1/2° angle on the main piece, and one 22-1/2° and one 45° on the return piece. Watch your fingers!



                    enter image description here



                    image source






                    share|improve this answer


























                    • These look good, but I’ve already glued/nailed the baseboard down. Just need to fill the gap, sand and paint. Won’t look as good, but I think I can still get it to look decent. What would be a good fill material?

                      – Tchai Quentin
                      2 days ago






                    • 5





                      It wouldn't be that difficult to cut the angle the opposite way on the installed piece. Since you're caulking anyway it doesn't have to be perfect.

                      – isherwood
                      2 days ago











                    • @TchaiQuentin: I'd replace it and do it right, but if you want to make it look good without taking it out, you could get some acrylic resin for automotive body repair and build out the missing material, then carve the return (like in Gary Bak's answer) using a rotary tool or the old fashioned way. All the (finished wood) returns on my home's lower window casing, and some other trim parts, were done this way, and I was able to duplicate it easily (on other wood parts, but the process should be similar for filler material) when I needed to.

                      – R..
                      yesterday
















                    26












                    26








                    26







                    Gary Bak's answer is good. You can also do an angled return if you wish to ease the transition a bit. This involves a 22-1/2° angle on the main piece, and one 22-1/2° and one 45° on the return piece. Watch your fingers!



                    enter image description here



                    image source






                    share|improve this answer















                    Gary Bak's answer is good. You can also do an angled return if you wish to ease the transition a bit. This involves a 22-1/2° angle on the main piece, and one 22-1/2° and one 45° on the return piece. Watch your fingers!



                    enter image description here



                    image source







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited 2 days ago

























                    answered 2 days ago









                    isherwoodisherwood

                    45.7k454117




                    45.7k454117













                    • These look good, but I’ve already glued/nailed the baseboard down. Just need to fill the gap, sand and paint. Won’t look as good, but I think I can still get it to look decent. What would be a good fill material?

                      – Tchai Quentin
                      2 days ago






                    • 5





                      It wouldn't be that difficult to cut the angle the opposite way on the installed piece. Since you're caulking anyway it doesn't have to be perfect.

                      – isherwood
                      2 days ago











                    • @TchaiQuentin: I'd replace it and do it right, but if you want to make it look good without taking it out, you could get some acrylic resin for automotive body repair and build out the missing material, then carve the return (like in Gary Bak's answer) using a rotary tool or the old fashioned way. All the (finished wood) returns on my home's lower window casing, and some other trim parts, were done this way, and I was able to duplicate it easily (on other wood parts, but the process should be similar for filler material) when I needed to.

                      – R..
                      yesterday





















                    • These look good, but I’ve already glued/nailed the baseboard down. Just need to fill the gap, sand and paint. Won’t look as good, but I think I can still get it to look decent. What would be a good fill material?

                      – Tchai Quentin
                      2 days ago






                    • 5





                      It wouldn't be that difficult to cut the angle the opposite way on the installed piece. Since you're caulking anyway it doesn't have to be perfect.

                      – isherwood
                      2 days ago











                    • @TchaiQuentin: I'd replace it and do it right, but if you want to make it look good without taking it out, you could get some acrylic resin for automotive body repair and build out the missing material, then carve the return (like in Gary Bak's answer) using a rotary tool or the old fashioned way. All the (finished wood) returns on my home's lower window casing, and some other trim parts, were done this way, and I was able to duplicate it easily (on other wood parts, but the process should be similar for filler material) when I needed to.

                      – R..
                      yesterday



















                    These look good, but I’ve already glued/nailed the baseboard down. Just need to fill the gap, sand and paint. Won’t look as good, but I think I can still get it to look decent. What would be a good fill material?

                    – Tchai Quentin
                    2 days ago





                    These look good, but I’ve already glued/nailed the baseboard down. Just need to fill the gap, sand and paint. Won’t look as good, but I think I can still get it to look decent. What would be a good fill material?

                    – Tchai Quentin
                    2 days ago




                    5




                    5





                    It wouldn't be that difficult to cut the angle the opposite way on the installed piece. Since you're caulking anyway it doesn't have to be perfect.

                    – isherwood
                    2 days ago





                    It wouldn't be that difficult to cut the angle the opposite way on the installed piece. Since you're caulking anyway it doesn't have to be perfect.

                    – isherwood
                    2 days ago













                    @TchaiQuentin: I'd replace it and do it right, but if you want to make it look good without taking it out, you could get some acrylic resin for automotive body repair and build out the missing material, then carve the return (like in Gary Bak's answer) using a rotary tool or the old fashioned way. All the (finished wood) returns on my home's lower window casing, and some other trim parts, were done this way, and I was able to duplicate it easily (on other wood parts, but the process should be similar for filler material) when I needed to.

                    – R..
                    yesterday







                    @TchaiQuentin: I'd replace it and do it right, but if you want to make it look good without taking it out, you could get some acrylic resin for automotive body repair and build out the missing material, then carve the return (like in Gary Bak's answer) using a rotary tool or the old fashioned way. All the (finished wood) returns on my home's lower window casing, and some other trim parts, were done this way, and I was able to duplicate it easily (on other wood parts, but the process should be similar for filler material) when I needed to.

                    – R..
                    yesterday













                    13














                    Any non-shrinking wood putty should do. Elmers, Minwax, and Durham's offer good products. You could also use a setting-type joint compound, such as Durabond.






                    share|improve this answer





















                    • 4





                      Automotive Bondo works wonders with wood as well. Dries fast and sands well.

                      – Gary Bak
                      2 days ago
















                    13














                    Any non-shrinking wood putty should do. Elmers, Minwax, and Durham's offer good products. You could also use a setting-type joint compound, such as Durabond.






                    share|improve this answer





















                    • 4





                      Automotive Bondo works wonders with wood as well. Dries fast and sands well.

                      – Gary Bak
                      2 days ago














                    13












                    13








                    13







                    Any non-shrinking wood putty should do. Elmers, Minwax, and Durham's offer good products. You could also use a setting-type joint compound, such as Durabond.






                    share|improve this answer















                    Any non-shrinking wood putty should do. Elmers, Minwax, and Durham's offer good products. You could also use a setting-type joint compound, such as Durabond.







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited 2 days ago

























                    answered 2 days ago









                    isherwoodisherwood

                    45.7k454117




                    45.7k454117








                    • 4





                      Automotive Bondo works wonders with wood as well. Dries fast and sands well.

                      – Gary Bak
                      2 days ago














                    • 4





                      Automotive Bondo works wonders with wood as well. Dries fast and sands well.

                      – Gary Bak
                      2 days ago








                    4




                    4





                    Automotive Bondo works wonders with wood as well. Dries fast and sands well.

                    – Gary Bak
                    2 days ago





                    Automotive Bondo works wonders with wood as well. Dries fast and sands well.

                    – Gary Bak
                    2 days ago











                    3














                    I would cut a piece of wood to fill as much of the gap as possible ( can be secured with either adhesive and/or nailed into place ). You can then fill the remaining small gaps with your choice of wood putty and sand/paint.






                    share|improve this answer




























                      3














                      I would cut a piece of wood to fill as much of the gap as possible ( can be secured with either adhesive and/or nailed into place ). You can then fill the remaining small gaps with your choice of wood putty and sand/paint.






                      share|improve this answer


























                        3












                        3








                        3







                        I would cut a piece of wood to fill as much of the gap as possible ( can be secured with either adhesive and/or nailed into place ). You can then fill the remaining small gaps with your choice of wood putty and sand/paint.






                        share|improve this answer













                        I would cut a piece of wood to fill as much of the gap as possible ( can be secured with either adhesive and/or nailed into place ). You can then fill the remaining small gaps with your choice of wood putty and sand/paint.







                        share|improve this answer












                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer










                        answered 2 days ago









                        sf02sf02

                        1383




                        1383























                            2














                            The Right Way to terminate baseboard is without any return or diagonal cuts, running it into plinth block at the bottom of the door casing. If you want to do this, you can probably do a 45-degree cut the opposite direction on a piece of leftover baseboard material to replace/extend what you already cut and cover up the seam when you paint.



                            Short of that, you can achieve a result like Gary Bak's answer (which also looks nice) without ripping out what you've done. I see two ways to do it:




                            1. Build up the missing material with filler (I'd use acrylic resin for automotive body repair, but other materials would work too), carve a return to match the baseboard design using a rotary tool with carving bits or unpowered carving tools, and sand it smooth with the existing baseboard before painting. Or,


                            2. Prepare a short (e.g. 1-2") piece of baseboard with the mitered return as described in Gark Bak's answer, cut off just enough of the end of your work (including the whole 45-degree part) in-place, and glue the attach the replacement in.







                            share|improve this answer
























                            • This is a Right Way™ to do it, especially if you already have a square cut plinth block at the bottom of your door trim. However, the picture in the OP shows that he does not have a plinth block there, but instead has Standard cheap American door trim™ which would require a different finishing technique.

                              – FreeMan
                              yesterday






                            • 1





                              @FreeMan: Indeed, but I think it's still worth mentioning because if OP has a need for waterproof baseboard (looks like a basement with flooding risk?) then getting something waterproof (a plastic or other artificial material plinth block) at the base of the door casing would probably be a really good idea too.

                              – R..
                              yesterday
















                            2














                            The Right Way to terminate baseboard is without any return or diagonal cuts, running it into plinth block at the bottom of the door casing. If you want to do this, you can probably do a 45-degree cut the opposite direction on a piece of leftover baseboard material to replace/extend what you already cut and cover up the seam when you paint.



                            Short of that, you can achieve a result like Gary Bak's answer (which also looks nice) without ripping out what you've done. I see two ways to do it:




                            1. Build up the missing material with filler (I'd use acrylic resin for automotive body repair, but other materials would work too), carve a return to match the baseboard design using a rotary tool with carving bits or unpowered carving tools, and sand it smooth with the existing baseboard before painting. Or,


                            2. Prepare a short (e.g. 1-2") piece of baseboard with the mitered return as described in Gark Bak's answer, cut off just enough of the end of your work (including the whole 45-degree part) in-place, and glue the attach the replacement in.







                            share|improve this answer
























                            • This is a Right Way™ to do it, especially if you already have a square cut plinth block at the bottom of your door trim. However, the picture in the OP shows that he does not have a plinth block there, but instead has Standard cheap American door trim™ which would require a different finishing technique.

                              – FreeMan
                              yesterday






                            • 1





                              @FreeMan: Indeed, but I think it's still worth mentioning because if OP has a need for waterproof baseboard (looks like a basement with flooding risk?) then getting something waterproof (a plastic or other artificial material plinth block) at the base of the door casing would probably be a really good idea too.

                              – R..
                              yesterday














                            2












                            2








                            2







                            The Right Way to terminate baseboard is without any return or diagonal cuts, running it into plinth block at the bottom of the door casing. If you want to do this, you can probably do a 45-degree cut the opposite direction on a piece of leftover baseboard material to replace/extend what you already cut and cover up the seam when you paint.



                            Short of that, you can achieve a result like Gary Bak's answer (which also looks nice) without ripping out what you've done. I see two ways to do it:




                            1. Build up the missing material with filler (I'd use acrylic resin for automotive body repair, but other materials would work too), carve a return to match the baseboard design using a rotary tool with carving bits or unpowered carving tools, and sand it smooth with the existing baseboard before painting. Or,


                            2. Prepare a short (e.g. 1-2") piece of baseboard with the mitered return as described in Gark Bak's answer, cut off just enough of the end of your work (including the whole 45-degree part) in-place, and glue the attach the replacement in.







                            share|improve this answer













                            The Right Way to terminate baseboard is without any return or diagonal cuts, running it into plinth block at the bottom of the door casing. If you want to do this, you can probably do a 45-degree cut the opposite direction on a piece of leftover baseboard material to replace/extend what you already cut and cover up the seam when you paint.



                            Short of that, you can achieve a result like Gary Bak's answer (which also looks nice) without ripping out what you've done. I see two ways to do it:




                            1. Build up the missing material with filler (I'd use acrylic resin for automotive body repair, but other materials would work too), carve a return to match the baseboard design using a rotary tool with carving bits or unpowered carving tools, and sand it smooth with the existing baseboard before painting. Or,


                            2. Prepare a short (e.g. 1-2") piece of baseboard with the mitered return as described in Gark Bak's answer, cut off just enough of the end of your work (including the whole 45-degree part) in-place, and glue the attach the replacement in.








                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered yesterday









                            R..R..

                            3942315




                            3942315













                            • This is a Right Way™ to do it, especially if you already have a square cut plinth block at the bottom of your door trim. However, the picture in the OP shows that he does not have a plinth block there, but instead has Standard cheap American door trim™ which would require a different finishing technique.

                              – FreeMan
                              yesterday






                            • 1





                              @FreeMan: Indeed, but I think it's still worth mentioning because if OP has a need for waterproof baseboard (looks like a basement with flooding risk?) then getting something waterproof (a plastic or other artificial material plinth block) at the base of the door casing would probably be a really good idea too.

                              – R..
                              yesterday



















                            • This is a Right Way™ to do it, especially if you already have a square cut plinth block at the bottom of your door trim. However, the picture in the OP shows that he does not have a plinth block there, but instead has Standard cheap American door trim™ which would require a different finishing technique.

                              – FreeMan
                              yesterday






                            • 1





                              @FreeMan: Indeed, but I think it's still worth mentioning because if OP has a need for waterproof baseboard (looks like a basement with flooding risk?) then getting something waterproof (a plastic or other artificial material plinth block) at the base of the door casing would probably be a really good idea too.

                              – R..
                              yesterday

















                            This is a Right Way™ to do it, especially if you already have a square cut plinth block at the bottom of your door trim. However, the picture in the OP shows that he does not have a plinth block there, but instead has Standard cheap American door trim™ which would require a different finishing technique.

                            – FreeMan
                            yesterday





                            This is a Right Way™ to do it, especially if you already have a square cut plinth block at the bottom of your door trim. However, the picture in the OP shows that he does not have a plinth block there, but instead has Standard cheap American door trim™ which would require a different finishing technique.

                            – FreeMan
                            yesterday




                            1




                            1





                            @FreeMan: Indeed, but I think it's still worth mentioning because if OP has a need for waterproof baseboard (looks like a basement with flooding risk?) then getting something waterproof (a plastic or other artificial material plinth block) at the base of the door casing would probably be a really good idea too.

                            – R..
                            yesterday





                            @FreeMan: Indeed, but I think it's still worth mentioning because if OP has a need for waterproof baseboard (looks like a basement with flooding risk?) then getting something waterproof (a plastic or other artificial material plinth block) at the base of the door casing would probably be a really good idea too.

                            – R..
                            yesterday











                            2














                            Another option is to just add a decorative base block moulding. They are available in a variety prices and styles. This would look nice and work well if you are not skilled enough to do the mitered solutions cough like me cough suggested in other answers.



                            Here's a link to one at a big box store.






                            share|improve this answer






























                              2














                              Another option is to just add a decorative base block moulding. They are available in a variety prices and styles. This would look nice and work well if you are not skilled enough to do the mitered solutions cough like me cough suggested in other answers.



                              Here's a link to one at a big box store.






                              share|improve this answer




























                                2












                                2








                                2







                                Another option is to just add a decorative base block moulding. They are available in a variety prices and styles. This would look nice and work well if you are not skilled enough to do the mitered solutions cough like me cough suggested in other answers.



                                Here's a link to one at a big box store.






                                share|improve this answer















                                Another option is to just add a decorative base block moulding. They are available in a variety prices and styles. This would look nice and work well if you are not skilled enough to do the mitered solutions cough like me cough suggested in other answers.



                                Here's a link to one at a big box store.







                                share|improve this answer














                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer








                                edited yesterday

























                                answered 2 days ago









                                TomTom

                                263




                                263























                                    1















                                    I could just caulk it, but it would look terrible.




                                    If you caulk the top of the baseboard(gives it a cleaner look) then you can caulk this side easily and it won't look out of place. A tube of basic white caulk doesn't cost a lot.






                                    share|improve this answer



















                                    • 3





                                      It'll shrink badly in that large void, though.

                                      – isherwood
                                      2 days ago






                                    • 2





                                      Yeah, might need some of your putty answer first

                                      – Machavity
                                      2 days ago











                                    • First yes, but then caluk second.

                                      – Mazura
                                      2 days ago
















                                    1















                                    I could just caulk it, but it would look terrible.




                                    If you caulk the top of the baseboard(gives it a cleaner look) then you can caulk this side easily and it won't look out of place. A tube of basic white caulk doesn't cost a lot.






                                    share|improve this answer



















                                    • 3





                                      It'll shrink badly in that large void, though.

                                      – isherwood
                                      2 days ago






                                    • 2





                                      Yeah, might need some of your putty answer first

                                      – Machavity
                                      2 days ago











                                    • First yes, but then caluk second.

                                      – Mazura
                                      2 days ago














                                    1












                                    1








                                    1








                                    I could just caulk it, but it would look terrible.




                                    If you caulk the top of the baseboard(gives it a cleaner look) then you can caulk this side easily and it won't look out of place. A tube of basic white caulk doesn't cost a lot.






                                    share|improve this answer














                                    I could just caulk it, but it would look terrible.




                                    If you caulk the top of the baseboard(gives it a cleaner look) then you can caulk this side easily and it won't look out of place. A tube of basic white caulk doesn't cost a lot.







                                    share|improve this answer












                                    share|improve this answer



                                    share|improve this answer










                                    answered 2 days ago









                                    MachavityMachavity

                                    6,65011634




                                    6,65011634








                                    • 3





                                      It'll shrink badly in that large void, though.

                                      – isherwood
                                      2 days ago






                                    • 2





                                      Yeah, might need some of your putty answer first

                                      – Machavity
                                      2 days ago











                                    • First yes, but then caluk second.

                                      – Mazura
                                      2 days ago














                                    • 3





                                      It'll shrink badly in that large void, though.

                                      – isherwood
                                      2 days ago






                                    • 2





                                      Yeah, might need some of your putty answer first

                                      – Machavity
                                      2 days ago











                                    • First yes, but then caluk second.

                                      – Mazura
                                      2 days ago








                                    3




                                    3





                                    It'll shrink badly in that large void, though.

                                    – isherwood
                                    2 days ago





                                    It'll shrink badly in that large void, though.

                                    – isherwood
                                    2 days ago




                                    2




                                    2





                                    Yeah, might need some of your putty answer first

                                    – Machavity
                                    2 days ago





                                    Yeah, might need some of your putty answer first

                                    – Machavity
                                    2 days ago













                                    First yes, but then caluk second.

                                    – Mazura
                                    2 days ago





                                    First yes, but then caluk second.

                                    – Mazura
                                    2 days ago











                                    0














                                    I would add a plinth block (as mentioned also in R.'s answer). If you have a moisture issue in this room you could get one made of waterproof material, and you will have a more finished look when you're done.



                                    If you measure and cut very carefully you can do this without removing the existing trim (other than what you're replacing with the block).



                                    Illustration showing where to cut trim and place plinth block




                                    1. Choose a block that's taller than your baseboard (around 2 inches/5 cm is standard, but I've seen blocks that were both shorter and taller than that) and wider than your door trim (1/4" or probably 1/2 cm wider is standard, but you may need to go a little bit wider than that to make sure you can cover the gap left when you cut off the beveled part of the baseboard) and deeper than both. If you have plinth blocks elsewhere in your house try to find something that is similar, or if there's a particular style of trim that you're adding in this room you could coordinate with that. Otherwise, something fairly plain will draw the least attention.

                                    2. Measure your block and the space two or three times, and mark where you want to cut across the door molding and baseboard. Measure up from the floor on both sides of the casing. I would set the block in place and eyeball my marks, too, just to make sure there isn't anything wonky with the floor (but I've only done this in really old houses, where there's always something wonky with the floor). If you have to err, err a bit on the side of cutting less, since you can always cut more.

                                    3. Use a hand pull-saw or something like a dremel to very carefully cut through the trim, being careful not to mar the floor or wall. (If you have room, you might want to slide a piece of cardboard or something like a floppy plastic notebook cover between the trim and the floor.) These will be 90° cuts, perpendicular to the wall.

                                    4. Carefully remove the trim from the wall. You may want to score behind it with a utility knife, and use a putty knife to help pry it free. It's OK if there's a little bit of damage to the paint behind the trim you're removing, because the block will cover it, but you don't want damage that extends beyond what the plinth can cover.

                                    5. Pull leftover nails and clean any glue or excess paint off the wall, so you have a smooth-ish surface. Again, dings behind the block will be hidden, but you want it to be able to lay smooth against the wall so you don't want nail heads or anything else protruding.

                                    6. Set your block in place. Typically it would be centered on the casing, but you may need to have it be wider on the outside of the door (toward the baseboard) to fill your gap. If it fits, great! Attach it as you would other trim, caulk, and finish. If it's a bit too large, you can either sand the existing trim or the block (or both) so that it fits. Hopefully you won't have much of a gap, but if you do this installation is pretty forgiving of filling and caulking—one of the purposes of these blocks is to disguise less-than-perfectly-true dimensions, and to avoid the need for precision angle cuts.






                                    share|improve this answer




























                                      0














                                      I would add a plinth block (as mentioned also in R.'s answer). If you have a moisture issue in this room you could get one made of waterproof material, and you will have a more finished look when you're done.



                                      If you measure and cut very carefully you can do this without removing the existing trim (other than what you're replacing with the block).



                                      Illustration showing where to cut trim and place plinth block




                                      1. Choose a block that's taller than your baseboard (around 2 inches/5 cm is standard, but I've seen blocks that were both shorter and taller than that) and wider than your door trim (1/4" or probably 1/2 cm wider is standard, but you may need to go a little bit wider than that to make sure you can cover the gap left when you cut off the beveled part of the baseboard) and deeper than both. If you have plinth blocks elsewhere in your house try to find something that is similar, or if there's a particular style of trim that you're adding in this room you could coordinate with that. Otherwise, something fairly plain will draw the least attention.

                                      2. Measure your block and the space two or three times, and mark where you want to cut across the door molding and baseboard. Measure up from the floor on both sides of the casing. I would set the block in place and eyeball my marks, too, just to make sure there isn't anything wonky with the floor (but I've only done this in really old houses, where there's always something wonky with the floor). If you have to err, err a bit on the side of cutting less, since you can always cut more.

                                      3. Use a hand pull-saw or something like a dremel to very carefully cut through the trim, being careful not to mar the floor or wall. (If you have room, you might want to slide a piece of cardboard or something like a floppy plastic notebook cover between the trim and the floor.) These will be 90° cuts, perpendicular to the wall.

                                      4. Carefully remove the trim from the wall. You may want to score behind it with a utility knife, and use a putty knife to help pry it free. It's OK if there's a little bit of damage to the paint behind the trim you're removing, because the block will cover it, but you don't want damage that extends beyond what the plinth can cover.

                                      5. Pull leftover nails and clean any glue or excess paint off the wall, so you have a smooth-ish surface. Again, dings behind the block will be hidden, but you want it to be able to lay smooth against the wall so you don't want nail heads or anything else protruding.

                                      6. Set your block in place. Typically it would be centered on the casing, but you may need to have it be wider on the outside of the door (toward the baseboard) to fill your gap. If it fits, great! Attach it as you would other trim, caulk, and finish. If it's a bit too large, you can either sand the existing trim or the block (or both) so that it fits. Hopefully you won't have much of a gap, but if you do this installation is pretty forgiving of filling and caulking—one of the purposes of these blocks is to disguise less-than-perfectly-true dimensions, and to avoid the need for precision angle cuts.






                                      share|improve this answer


























                                        0












                                        0








                                        0







                                        I would add a plinth block (as mentioned also in R.'s answer). If you have a moisture issue in this room you could get one made of waterproof material, and you will have a more finished look when you're done.



                                        If you measure and cut very carefully you can do this without removing the existing trim (other than what you're replacing with the block).



                                        Illustration showing where to cut trim and place plinth block




                                        1. Choose a block that's taller than your baseboard (around 2 inches/5 cm is standard, but I've seen blocks that were both shorter and taller than that) and wider than your door trim (1/4" or probably 1/2 cm wider is standard, but you may need to go a little bit wider than that to make sure you can cover the gap left when you cut off the beveled part of the baseboard) and deeper than both. If you have plinth blocks elsewhere in your house try to find something that is similar, or if there's a particular style of trim that you're adding in this room you could coordinate with that. Otherwise, something fairly plain will draw the least attention.

                                        2. Measure your block and the space two or three times, and mark where you want to cut across the door molding and baseboard. Measure up from the floor on both sides of the casing. I would set the block in place and eyeball my marks, too, just to make sure there isn't anything wonky with the floor (but I've only done this in really old houses, where there's always something wonky with the floor). If you have to err, err a bit on the side of cutting less, since you can always cut more.

                                        3. Use a hand pull-saw or something like a dremel to very carefully cut through the trim, being careful not to mar the floor or wall. (If you have room, you might want to slide a piece of cardboard or something like a floppy plastic notebook cover between the trim and the floor.) These will be 90° cuts, perpendicular to the wall.

                                        4. Carefully remove the trim from the wall. You may want to score behind it with a utility knife, and use a putty knife to help pry it free. It's OK if there's a little bit of damage to the paint behind the trim you're removing, because the block will cover it, but you don't want damage that extends beyond what the plinth can cover.

                                        5. Pull leftover nails and clean any glue or excess paint off the wall, so you have a smooth-ish surface. Again, dings behind the block will be hidden, but you want it to be able to lay smooth against the wall so you don't want nail heads or anything else protruding.

                                        6. Set your block in place. Typically it would be centered on the casing, but you may need to have it be wider on the outside of the door (toward the baseboard) to fill your gap. If it fits, great! Attach it as you would other trim, caulk, and finish. If it's a bit too large, you can either sand the existing trim or the block (or both) so that it fits. Hopefully you won't have much of a gap, but if you do this installation is pretty forgiving of filling and caulking—one of the purposes of these blocks is to disguise less-than-perfectly-true dimensions, and to avoid the need for precision angle cuts.






                                        share|improve this answer













                                        I would add a plinth block (as mentioned also in R.'s answer). If you have a moisture issue in this room you could get one made of waterproof material, and you will have a more finished look when you're done.



                                        If you measure and cut very carefully you can do this without removing the existing trim (other than what you're replacing with the block).



                                        Illustration showing where to cut trim and place plinth block




                                        1. Choose a block that's taller than your baseboard (around 2 inches/5 cm is standard, but I've seen blocks that were both shorter and taller than that) and wider than your door trim (1/4" or probably 1/2 cm wider is standard, but you may need to go a little bit wider than that to make sure you can cover the gap left when you cut off the beveled part of the baseboard) and deeper than both. If you have plinth blocks elsewhere in your house try to find something that is similar, or if there's a particular style of trim that you're adding in this room you could coordinate with that. Otherwise, something fairly plain will draw the least attention.

                                        2. Measure your block and the space two or three times, and mark where you want to cut across the door molding and baseboard. Measure up from the floor on both sides of the casing. I would set the block in place and eyeball my marks, too, just to make sure there isn't anything wonky with the floor (but I've only done this in really old houses, where there's always something wonky with the floor). If you have to err, err a bit on the side of cutting less, since you can always cut more.

                                        3. Use a hand pull-saw or something like a dremel to very carefully cut through the trim, being careful not to mar the floor or wall. (If you have room, you might want to slide a piece of cardboard or something like a floppy plastic notebook cover between the trim and the floor.) These will be 90° cuts, perpendicular to the wall.

                                        4. Carefully remove the trim from the wall. You may want to score behind it with a utility knife, and use a putty knife to help pry it free. It's OK if there's a little bit of damage to the paint behind the trim you're removing, because the block will cover it, but you don't want damage that extends beyond what the plinth can cover.

                                        5. Pull leftover nails and clean any glue or excess paint off the wall, so you have a smooth-ish surface. Again, dings behind the block will be hidden, but you want it to be able to lay smooth against the wall so you don't want nail heads or anything else protruding.

                                        6. Set your block in place. Typically it would be centered on the casing, but you may need to have it be wider on the outside of the door (toward the baseboard) to fill your gap. If it fits, great! Attach it as you would other trim, caulk, and finish. If it's a bit too large, you can either sand the existing trim or the block (or both) so that it fits. Hopefully you won't have much of a gap, but if you do this installation is pretty forgiving of filling and caulking—one of the purposes of these blocks is to disguise less-than-perfectly-true dimensions, and to avoid the need for precision angle cuts.







                                        share|improve this answer












                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer










                                        answered 5 hours ago









                                        1006a1006a

                                        1113




                                        1113























                                            0














                                            The base block and miter solutions already proposed are certainly the prettiest answers. If you really want to use a filler, a coworker of mine has used Kwik-Poly. It mixes like a 2-part epoxy and will sand and work like wood once it's hard and is paintable.






                                            share|improve this answer








                                            New contributor




                                            Solz is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.

























                                              0














                                              The base block and miter solutions already proposed are certainly the prettiest answers. If you really want to use a filler, a coworker of mine has used Kwik-Poly. It mixes like a 2-part epoxy and will sand and work like wood once it's hard and is paintable.






                                              share|improve this answer








                                              New contributor




                                              Solz is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                              Check out our Code of Conduct.























                                                0












                                                0








                                                0







                                                The base block and miter solutions already proposed are certainly the prettiest answers. If you really want to use a filler, a coworker of mine has used Kwik-Poly. It mixes like a 2-part epoxy and will sand and work like wood once it's hard and is paintable.






                                                share|improve this answer








                                                New contributor




                                                Solz is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                Check out our Code of Conduct.










                                                The base block and miter solutions already proposed are certainly the prettiest answers. If you really want to use a filler, a coworker of mine has used Kwik-Poly. It mixes like a 2-part epoxy and will sand and work like wood once it's hard and is paintable.







                                                share|improve this answer








                                                New contributor




                                                Solz is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer






                                                New contributor




                                                Solz is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                                answered 4 hours ago









                                                SolzSolz

                                                1




                                                1




                                                New contributor




                                                Solz is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                Check out our Code of Conduct.





                                                New contributor





                                                Solz is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                Check out our Code of Conduct.






                                                Solz is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                Check out our Code of Conduct.






























                                                    draft saved

                                                    draft discarded




















































                                                    Thanks for contributing an answer to Home Improvement Stack Exchange!


                                                    • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                                                    But avoid



                                                    • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                                                    • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


                                                    To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                                                    draft saved


                                                    draft discarded














                                                    StackExchange.ready(
                                                    function () {
                                                    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fdiy.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f154454%2fhow-to-fill-a-gap-behind-plastic-baseboard%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                                                    }
                                                    );

                                                    Post as a guest















                                                    Required, but never shown





















































                                                    Required, but never shown














                                                    Required, but never shown












                                                    Required, but never shown







                                                    Required, but never shown

































                                                    Required, but never shown














                                                    Required, but never shown












                                                    Required, but never shown







                                                    Required, but never shown







                                                    Popular posts from this blog

                                                    1300-talet

                                                    1300-talet

                                                    Has there ever been an instance of an active nuclear power plant within or near a war zone?