Floor Mouldings

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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.

      Frequently Asked Questions

      What are floor mouldings and where are they used?
      Floor mouldings are the trim pieces that create finished transitions between different flooring surfaces and at the perimeter of rooms. They include T-mouldings for room-to-room transitions, reducers where floor heights change, end caps, base shoe, and stair nose pieces. Each serves a specific transition function.
      What is the difference between a T-moulding and a reducer?
      A T-moulding creates a flush transition between two floors at the same height, typically used in doorways where two floating floors meet. A reducer creates a smooth slope between two floors of different heights, most commonly where hardwood or laminate meets lower-profile vinyl or tile. Using the wrong one creates an awkward height mismatch.
      Do floor mouldings need to match the flooring exactly?
      Matching the flooring species and finish is the standard approach for a unified look. Windsor Plywood carries floor mouldings in maple and oak that coordinate with common flooring options. A contrasting moulding can work as a deliberate design choice, but mismatched mouldings often look like an oversight rather than a decision.
      What is base shoe moulding and when do I need it?
      Base shoe is a small, flexible moulding installed at the base of the baseboard where it meets the floor. It covers the expansion gap required for floating floors and bridges minor gaps caused by an uneven floor surface. It is particularly important for laminate and LVP installations where the gap between baseboard and floor is visible.
      How do I install floor mouldings on a floating floor without restricting movement?
      Floor mouldings must be fastened to the wall or door frame only, never to the flooring itself. Nailing or gluing the moulding to the floor prevents the floating floor from expanding and contracting with seasonal humidity changes, which leads to buckling or joint separation. Use finishing nails into the wall framing, not into the floor.