How to bulk up your window casing in 5 easy steps

Take your window casings from blah to Ta-Da! The window casing in this entire house is the most boring, basic, builder grade molding available.  It’s funny to me the things builders skimp on.   There is no need to live with blah trim!  Trick out your existing window casings by adding another layer of trim moulding (or two or three layers) to really amp up the awesomeness of your doors and windows!Trick out your existing window casing by adding another layer of trim moulding to really amp up the awesomeness of your doors and windows!

Bulking up your window casings can as easy as adding another layer of trim molding to the existing trim.  Or, if you feel the way I do about window treatments, you don’t want empty space above the window.  If you don’t need any sort of window treatment for functional purposes you can use trim to raise the window height. How to trick out your trim molding

How to bulk up your window casing

Starting with blah skimpy molding with mitered corners.

Trimming out a window

1.  Add an additional layer of molding with mitered corners to match the corners of your existing trim.

Adding window casings

2.  Add a piece of MDF that extends beyond your molding by 1″ on each side and is a similar thickness to the outer edge of your second layer of molding.  The height will vary depending on your ceiling height.  Mine is 3/4″ thick and 14″ tall.

Adding a window pediment

3.  Add a detailed molding in proportion to the height of your MDF.  I added one piece of small trim at the bottom of the MDF and another piece of the same trim about 5″ up — upside down.

How to trick out your trim molding

*Make sure to wrap the detailed trim around the edge of the MDF with a “return” with 45 degree beveled cuts.

How to trick out your trim molding

4.  Add crown molding to the top, wrapping around the MDF with a return (cut as an outside corner using your preferred method of cutting crown molding).  How to trick out your trim molding

You could take your cross header all the way to the ceiling and integrate the crown molding into the crown molding for the entire room.  (I would have done this but I got lazy on account of I had JUST installed the crown molding before I decided to do this treatment.)

If you don’t like painting everything white, install wood molding that you can stain.

How to trick out your trim molding

That was easy, right?  😉
How to bulk up your window casing in 5 easy steps

Bulk up your window casings.

How to trick out your trim molding

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17 Comments

  1. Kelsey Schweitzer says:

    Great tips for building your own door headers! We actually just posted a similar article on The Timeless House blog–3 Rules for Building Door Headers. Check it out and let us know what you think!

  2. Love this idea. Do you think it would work in a room that doesn’t have crown molding? Because of the “open-conceptness” of our house, adding crown molding would mean adding it to almost the entire house – something I’m not prepared to do. Would fancy shmancy windows look weird with plan ceilings?

  3. This is five easy steps and although I am not a huge fan of the “top heavy” molding, I repeat “you are a MASTER and so many appreciate the great options/tips you give us for our homes!” And I bet you will have the end result looking great. Always love your work Sandra. I am saving this tutorial “just in case” someday….

  4. Doing this!!! Your office is going to look awesome! I’d love to hear what you would recommend for vaulted ceiling. I hate them. My living room has a 9′ that vaults to 18′ on the other side of the room. Kinda tricky for me to figure out the cuts. The ceiling is also popcorn. After living here 22 years I’m FINALLY going to change it as much as I can.

  5. Michele @ The Scrap Shoppe says:

    This is AWESOME, Sandra! I’m going to need you to take a trip to middle TN and hook my windows up. Mkay? Love it! 🙂

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