Baseboard

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      Add the perfect finishing touch to any room with our extensive selection of quality mouldings. Whether you're upgrading baseboards, enhancing cabinet details, or framing windows and doors, we carry a wide variety of styles to suit any design—from classic to contemporary. Choose from finely crafted options in oak, fir, hemlock, maple, MDF, and more. Our moulding collection includes crown mouldings, panel mouldings, corner trim, casings, and baseboards—ideal for DIYers, builders, and designers alike. If you're looking for high-end finishing trim and wainscoting, our S4S lumber selections include the most popular wood species such as oak, walnut, maple, and more. Every piece is sourced with care for quality, consistency, and long-lasting appeal. As a proudly Canadian company with locally owned stores, we focus on personalized service to help bring your vision to life. Whether you're completing a new build or refreshing a space, Windsor Plywood has the right moulding for every project. Visit your local store for expert guidance, custom options, and hard-to-find profiles you won’t see anywhere else.

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      Frequently Asked Questions

      What baseboard height works best for standard 8-foot ceilings?
      For 8-foot ceilings, a baseboard between 3 inches and 4.5 inches tall is proportionate and reads cleanly. Going too tall creates a visually heavy base that can make a room feel shorter. For ceilings 9 feet and above, 4.5 inches to 6 inches or taller suits the scale of the room.
      What is the difference between traditional and modern baseboard profiles?
      Traditional baseboards feature curved profiles with ogee caps, beveled faces, and layered detail. They suit colonial, craftsman, and heritage-style interiors. Modern baseboards are flat or have minimal detail, with clean square edges that work in contemporary, Scandinavian, and transitional spaces. Windsor Plywood carries both categories.
      Should baseboard be wood or MDF?
      MDF baseboard is the standard for painted applications. It has no grain to telegraph through paint, cuts cleanly, and holds paint consistently. Wood baseboard is better for stained or natural finishes where the grain is part of the design. MDF should not be used in bathrooms or areas with regular moisture exposure.
      How do I cut baseboard corners to fit properly?
      Inside corners use coped joints, where one piece is cut square and the second piece is coped to follow the profile of the first. Outside corners use 45-degree mitre cuts. Coped joints hold up better over time as wood expands and contracts with humidity changes; mitre-only inside corners tend to open up.
      Can baseboard be installed over tile or thick flooring without a gap?
      The baseboard should sit on top of the finished floor, not the subfloor. If tile or thick flooring has already been installed, you may need a taller baseboard or a base shoe moulding to cover the gap cleanly. Base shoe is the standard solution for bridging the gap between baseboard and an uneven floor surface.