Custom Kitchens
Cabinetry, islands, pantries, and integrated trim.
KitchensCrown, base, door and window casings, wainscoting, paneling, stair details, and the trim work that gives a room its finished edge.
Good trim looks quiet when it is done right. The casing lines up, corners close cleanly, and the transitions feel planned before paint ever starts.
What we build
Single-piece crown, built-up crown, and stacked molding for rooms that need a more finished ceiling line.
Modern flat stock, traditional profiles, or built-up base fitted to the floor and room.
Casing, head trim, plinth blocks, and details matched across the home where needed.
Board-and-batten, shaker, raised panel, beadboard, and full-height wall treatments.
Coffered layouts, decorative beams, and tray ceiling trim coordinated with lighting and layout.
Skirt boards, riser details, returns, paneling, rails, and stair transitions.

Approach
Trim that's done right doesn't show its seams. Joints close tight, returns are square, miters hold, and long runs are laid out so transitions land where they make sense. You shouldn't have to caulk over the work — and once paint goes on, it should still look right.
The work is in the planning and fit — coping inside corners, scribing to walls and floors that aren't level, laying out the room before any trim goes up. It's quiet work. But it's the difference between a room that feels finished and one that doesn't.
Trim FAQs
Usually yes. We pick up profiles by tracing existing trim, then either source the matching profile from a millwork supplier or build it up from stock pieces. Older homes (pre-1950s especially) often have profiles you can't buy off the shelf — that's normal, and we work around it.
Coping cuts one piece to fit against the profile of another. Mitering cuts both pieces at 45 degrees. Inside corners on baseboards and crown should usually be coped because they hide better and stay closed when the wood moves with humidity. Outside corners get mitered. The right method depends on the trim profile and the corner.
Both. Whole-house re-trim for a remodel or new build, or single-room work like adding wainscoting in a dining room or upgrading crown in a primary suite. Single rooms are useful when you want to test a design before committing to the rest of the house.
A single room of new trim (base, crown, casings) usually takes a few days. A whole-house re-trim runs one to three weeks depending on size and detail. Coffered ceilings and elaborate paneling add time. We give a practical schedule before starting and communicate early if timing needs to shift.
Get an estimate
Whole-house re-trim, a single room, or one specific detail — tell us what you are working on.
231-571-8001