Residential Design Guidelines

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Residential Design Guidelines
DECORATIVE TRIM

 

historic trim

Decorative trim -- whether wood, metal, stone, clay tile, or terra cotta Ðis found most often at the porch and around windows, but also at the cornice line, windows, and even at the roofline. Wood trim can be treated with preservatives and paint. Loose trim should be refastened. Partially rotted wooden details, such as brackets, can sometimes be filled in with expoxies and other synthetic resins.

Retain historic trim wherever possible. Where replacement is necessary, it should be with detail similar to the original in materials, size, and overall design.

Original trim         

Replacement, if exact duplication not available

decorative trim

 Trim Simplification If it is not possible to replicate missing or deteriorated trim, new trim should match the original as closely as the budget will allow.

replicate trim
dentils

Dentils are often found along the cornice of porches and roofs. They are small blocks of wood placed in regularly spaced rows like teeth. In this illustration, the dentil course is flanked by rows of decorative molding.

 

trim guide

Save any trim that must be removed and use it as a guide in duplication. Where trim details cannot be matched exactly, they can be approximated in size and bulk. Many catalogs are available for ordering replacement trim.

 

 

Residential Design Guidelines: Facade   Doors   Windows   Trim   Porches   Roof   Additions
 


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