Molding (decorative)
Encyclopedia : M : MO : MOL : Molding (decorative)
- For other uses, see molding.
A "sprung" molding is a strip that has beveled edges, allowing it to be mounted at an angle between two non-parallel planes (such as between a wall and a ceiling). Other types of molding are referred to as "plain".
Types
There are a variety of common moldings:
- Astragal — attached to one of a pair of doors to serve as a stop for the other door. The two types are "T-Astragal" and "Flat Astragal". The later is primarily used for decorative purposes.
- Baseboard, "base molding" or "skirting board" — used at the junction of an interior wall and floor to protect the wall from impacts.
- Batten — a symmetrical molding that is placed across a joint where two parallel panels or boards meet.
- Bed molding — a narrow molding used at the junction of a wall and ceiling. Bed moldings can be either sprung or plain.
- Casing — the trim for both sides of a door or window opening.
- Chair rails — a horizontal molding placed part way up a wall to protect the surface from chairs. Primarily used now for decoration.
- Corner guard — a molding used to protect the edge of the wall at an outside corner, or to cover a joint on an inside corner.
- Cove molding — a concave-profile molding that is used at the junction of an interior wall and ceiling.
- Crown molding — a wide, sprung molding that is used at the junction of an interior wall and ceiling.
- Drip cap — this is placed over a door or window opening to prevent water from flowing under the siding or across the glass.
- Fillet - small, flat band separating two surfaces, or between the flutes of a column.
- Keel molding — with a sharp edge, resembling in cross-section the keel of a ship.
- Screen molding — this is a small molding that is used to hide the area where a screen is attached to the frame.
- Shoe molding, toe molding or quarter-round — often used at the bottom of the baseboard to cover a small gap or uneven edge between the flooring and the baseboard.
Theory
At their simplest, moldings are a means of applying light and dark shaded stripes to a structure or object without having to change the material or apply pigment. The aesthetic function is similar to that of go-faster stripes applied to the side of a vehicle.
Imagine a flat vertical wall evenly lit by daylight. Adding a small overhanging horizontal step will introduce a dark horizontal band — this is called a fillet molding. Conversely, adding a vertical fillet to a horizontal surface will appear as a light band.
These bands do not need to be evenly shaded. A concave cavetto molding will produce a band which is darker at the top and lighter at the bottom, whereas a convex ovolo molding will be lighter at the top and darker at the bottom (other concave moldings are the scotia and congé, and other convex moldings are the echinus, torus and astragal).
Placing an ovolo molding directly above a cavetto forms a smooth 'S' shaped curve with vertical ends, which appears as a band that is light at the top and bottom but dark in the interior — this is called an ogee or cyma reversa molding.
Similarly, a cavetto above an ovolo forms an 'S' with horizontal ends and appears as a dark band with a light interior — called a cyma or cyma recta molding.
Together, these basic elements and their variants form a decorative vocabulary which can be assembled and rearranged in endless combinations. This vocabulary is at the core of both Classical architecture and Gothic architecture.
See also
- Architectural terms
- Architecture of Ancient Greece
- Architrave
- Cornice (architecture)
- Entablature
- Renaissance architecture
- Roman architecture
External links
Footnote
Astragal is also sometimes used to refer to the vertical decorative moldings separating panes of glass in a sash window (see muntin) and, sometimes, thin decorative molding on paneling.
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.






