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Hello, I have been reviewing the forum for about a year now, but never had to post anything in the past. My next stop is the introductions section but for now I am in need of some help with picture frame wainscoting (it's what my wife wants, and probably more suited to my ability than traditional wainscoting).
Anyway, the area that the wainscoting will go is down a hallway to the front door, but both walls are of different lengths. One is 116 inches and the other is 157 inches. I somewhat decided on having four picture frames on the smaller wall. With four inches of spacing in between the frames and the end of the walls it left me with 24 inch wide frames. The problem is when I go to the opposite side of the wall. The only way that I could make those same dimensions work (4 inch spacing and 24 inch wide frames) on the longer wall is by having an 8 inch wide frame at the end of the wall.
As you can see in the pictures I don't have the chair rail up yet, that is going in today. I laid out the frames using painters tape to get an idea of what it would look like. I personally think it will look good, but I'm not sure my wife does. Although she hasn't said so, I don't think that she likes the small 8 inch frame stuck on the end. I crunched some numbers using all different lengths of spacing (4 1/4, 4 1/2, 4 3/4, 5, 5 1/2, 6, 7, 7 1/4, and 7 1/2 inches) but all give me a difference of around two inches wide per frame, which is not something I can cheat. I tried adjusting the number of frames on the small wall to 5 and the longer wall to 6, but I still cannot figure out a way that gives me close to the same frame width.
I tried searching on the internet to find examples of what this type of problem but no luck. Is having that small 8 inch wide frame at the end the correct way of going about this? If it makes any difference, I think the wife wants me to continue the picture frames around more areas of the great room, so I will have more walls to figure out with varying lengths. Do I still just use the 24 inch wide frame for cohesiveness and then put small frames on the ends to fill in the extra space?
Is there some magical way of figuring out spacing and size of frames to make it work on a number of different sized walls?
I hope what I have said makes sense to you, and that your far greater experience in woodworking can lead me to the answer. Thanks for your time in reading this.
Mike
Anyway, the area that the wainscoting will go is down a hallway to the front door, but both walls are of different lengths. One is 116 inches and the other is 157 inches. I somewhat decided on having four picture frames on the smaller wall. With four inches of spacing in between the frames and the end of the walls it left me with 24 inch wide frames. The problem is when I go to the opposite side of the wall. The only way that I could make those same dimensions work (4 inch spacing and 24 inch wide frames) on the longer wall is by having an 8 inch wide frame at the end of the wall.
As you can see in the pictures I don't have the chair rail up yet, that is going in today. I laid out the frames using painters tape to get an idea of what it would look like. I personally think it will look good, but I'm not sure my wife does. Although she hasn't said so, I don't think that she likes the small 8 inch frame stuck on the end. I crunched some numbers using all different lengths of spacing (4 1/4, 4 1/2, 4 3/4, 5, 5 1/2, 6, 7, 7 1/4, and 7 1/2 inches) but all give me a difference of around two inches wide per frame, which is not something I can cheat. I tried adjusting the number of frames on the small wall to 5 and the longer wall to 6, but I still cannot figure out a way that gives me close to the same frame width.
I tried searching on the internet to find examples of what this type of problem but no luck. Is having that small 8 inch wide frame at the end the correct way of going about this? If it makes any difference, I think the wife wants me to continue the picture frames around more areas of the great room, so I will have more walls to figure out with varying lengths. Do I still just use the 24 inch wide frame for cohesiveness and then put small frames on the ends to fill in the extra space?
Is there some magical way of figuring out spacing and size of frames to make it work on a number of different sized walls?
I hope what I have said makes sense to you, and that your far greater experience in woodworking can lead me to the answer. Thanks for your time in reading this.
Mike
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