Hello, I am Korean, and this style has become very popular in Korea about 3 years ago. A person on a RU-vid channel called Interior Show introduced a method called no-molding, which became a huge trend. There are many people in the world who think the same way as you, and I wanted to let you know that it has been accepted in the market. Personally, I am planning to immigrate to the United States soon. I was planning on getting used to minimalist interiors in Korea, but I was quite disappointed when I saw the standard of remodeled houses in the U.S. With too much trim, the rooms always look crowded and cluttered. Even the tones of the furniture, doors, ceilings, and floors don't match. In Korea, there are already attempts to collaborate between furniture and materials teams to match the tone of all products. Once your eyes get used to minimalism, it is very difficult to go back. I think Americans are like that too. I would also like to tell you about hidden doors, which are very popular in Korea at the same time as non-moulding. They are integrated with the wall and have no handles, making them feel like part of the door. In my opinion, this is the pinnacle of minimalism. I'm so glad I found this video. There are a lot of materials available in Korea that will implement the details you're thinking of. It's even cheaper. You don't speak Korean, but I'm leaving a link because I want to show you the details and photos of the interior design they are aiming for. I support you very much and will definitely contact you if I ever need to remodel my house in the future. Also, if you have any questions, please feel free to leave a comment at any time.
I don't see the link, but we are very interested in doing this, and any products that would help us do it. Also, and installation video would be great... not sure how you get that even reveal if the floors are uneven. We will be doing polished concrete as well. Also, does the trim support the weight of the drywall before you screw it to the wall, or do you need a temp spacer?
Man… my hat goes off to you on this idea and execution! As I was watching this video, all I could think of was the wicking effect that would occur without a capillary break and then you answered that concern. 👏 Great creativity and excellent finished product. 👍
Just at the start but you can use a long leg L bead for a window return so the fiber comes up over the area where a baseboard would be. Look up trim-tex products. Good find on the BJ paint. Always start at commercial products for paints.
I remember seeing you on buildshow network in the past, glad that I found your youtube channel now that your no longer posting over there. Love your super modern details and designs. I was thinking of a detail where I wanted to run drywall into door frame (aluminum or steel) with no trim/casing just a flush transition. Just like you have with your bookshelf, but a door frame. I was worried about the drywall or in my case it would be veneer plaster cracking because of the different CTE's of the plaster and metal. What are your thoughts on that? Did you also use the L profile reglet where your wall runs into the bookcase or does they drywall go right to the wood? I was also planning on doing something similar on the floor wall transition but using a Z profile for a shadow gap.
Thanks for joining the party. I like to avoid caulking drywall to anything when given the option otherwise. Plastic L beads are my preferred method & require zero long term maintenance like caulking can
This is so clever. Could you please share the type of fiber glass gypsum you are using? I m considering replacing all baseboards in my house using you awesome approach
@DesignBuildDoug do you use 1/2 inch Densglass? If so, they are very hard to find due not being fire rated. The only option is 5/8 in which is fire rated but would be too thick..thoughts?
It seems like you’ll need a 3/16 mud at the bottom to smooth over the regulat ~ how is that not denting and dinging? even though the dense shield is tough it’s underneath ? Thanks
Love this! Amazing job! I'm getting rid of all baseboards and door trim for my condo renovation. Can you please make a video of how to tile showers flush to drywal? like you have in your bathroom...
Amazing detail! Thanks for sharing! Is there any reason not to just do the entire wall in densglass? Especially in the bathroom it seems like it would be great from a moisture / mold perspective.
Briliant This is exactly what I was looking for. Cause I’m minimalist too. Can you please share the materials you used for that invisible baseboard and maybe a little video how to do it if you have. Thank you.
why not just dens glass the bottom 4 feet of all walls and then you don’t have to go through in a separate trim stage it’s just part of the boarding. Less joints overall.
Good question - you can, really depends on ceiling heights, size of drywall used, & where you want your seams. Often times we install 10 tall sheets of drywall, so the 4’ segment doesn’t usually come into play. Also the difference in material costs adds up. Try it out however your thinking though, & circle back & let us know!
honestly, my inclination would just be to use glass mat everywhere, or to draw the line at the-ceiling-wall joint- most manufacturers make a non-coloured glass mat “abuse resistant” board specifically for commercial/institutional hallways that will get filled and painted.
but at a mimimum…. if you’re already going to the trouble of using two materials, may as well make it ceiling height minus 8ft high and you therefore get maximum height of glass mat at bottom of wall without cutting any sheets / incurring waste for the main field of wall
Hey Doug. Nice look. You called the L shaped metal product you use at the bottom a "metal L-rig?" I didn't quite hear it right. Is that also what you use to trim out the casing on your doorways and shelves?
Metal L reglet (reglet being a generic term). This finished edge comes in plastic too. Some of my builder buddies like to use the TrimTex plastic tear away bead with a caulked to the floor finish as well.
Thx! I’ll do a video, but here a quick explanation- do double drywall (the top piece being fiberglass backed aka densglass). Then put a plastic L bead on the edge of the top piece. Finish your drywall. Then before tile starts, waterproof the edge of both sheets including the inside of the L bead & connect that waterproofing to the tile backer board. Now you’re ready to set your tile flush to the drywall. Either leave a grout joint or empty 1/16”shadow line gap in between the two flush materials.
Yes please make a video on this! The flush finish is beautiful. I’ve also seen this done with a concrete floor and permanent entryway mat that was flush. Details that you rarely see!
Hey! Thankyou for amaZing design solutions! I have a question about instalation. Right now I am completly “rebuilding” my apartment. And in order to apply that buity you have created I need to plan ahead. I need to laydown parquet but also i need to install plasterboard walls. To create invisible baseboard my parquet must go under the wall segment. So floor first walls later? Am I right? I am just very afraid about builders damaging the final floor in the process… what would be your suggestion? How to order the jobs in construction?
@@DesignBuildDoug Great! So to be fool proof. 1st professionals do plaster walls, 2nd I am cutting out 6 inches of plaster from the ground. 3th - Parquet. 4th - finishing invisible baseboard? Sounds right?
@@kurisas1 Close. Just dont run the plaster down to the ground, that way you wont have to cut anything out. Then connect the two different types of wallboard with seam tape and finish everything the same
I’ve got multiple photos on IG of this process via the hashtag #densbase & #invisiblebadeboard. This video was more conceptual in nature but I’ll plan an updated version that’s more technical in the future
I’m trying to avoid drywall as much as possible. Lots of ideas in my brain, one is flush PVC trim that looks almost exactly like what you’ve done here except would probably need a bead or reveal if it has to butt up to drywall.
I love the look; but, doesn't the Denshield base create a butt joint with the drywall? Who wants to feather-out and sand a butt joint upwards and sideways every 8 feet on their hands and knees? (Denshield only comes in 3x5 and 4x8 as far as I know?)
Hey, (sorry for bad english) My screed is isolated from my bare wall (it is a solid timber wall), by a 8 mm thick perimeter isolation strip. Now the next step I think would be attaching (ie screwing) the metal-L reglet to the bare wall exactly with the upper edge line of finished floor level and finish the gypsum plasterboard covering of the timber wall. Now the tiles can be laid exactly underneath the plaster edge. First Question: Is this feasible in this way? Second Question: Now I have a (very) little gap ("shadow gap") between the upper edge of the tile and the plaster edge. You also have that little gap as far as I can tell from watching the video. When mopping the flor, water can flow into that gap, can't it? Would you leave that gap open, or would you fill it with a (of course flexible) joint sealer (such as silicone). What type of joint sealer would you take to close it? Thanks, Leo
Yes…caulking is optional & I typically only consider doing in wet spaces like bathrooms. I recommend a low profile swiffer type mop for common areas. If you use a sealant I would recommend Lexel by Sashco & would sponge it in prior to final paint
What I don't totally understand is flooring install. It seems to me that the baseboard covers up gaps between the floor and the wall. I can only figure that you have to install the floor BEFORE filling in the bottom 4" which is disappointing for me because I don't want to tear up my tile floor just to make the baseboard flush.
@@jah86you would need cement mud for the seams too in order to maintain a similar expansion & contraction rate. The reason I know this is that I have taped & floated a Hardie soffit before & it cracked to shit at all the seams.
@@DesignBuildDoug Our daughter just spent a fortune on her 3000 square foot remodel and went with that and trimless on the windows an doors. The designer told her this is the lastest trending design. Almost without exception everyone that has seen it asks when they are going to finish. It has really hurt her feelings. The craftsmanship is outstanding though.
I absolutely love this detail! Definitely want to try on my next project. Have you had anyone want this but with a plaster wall? Any benefit over painting with the Scuff-X in particular for the base/whole wall? Lastly, for that bathroom feature, is the whole wall Durock into DensGlass or entirely DensGlass?
This would work well with plaster too but haven’t tried it yet. Have done it with a concrete micro-topping. The scuff-x finishes beautifully over wall board but I wouldn’t recommend it for wood application because it has too many solids for my liking there. For the flush tile, we transitioned from concrete wall board in the shower to two layers of Densglass (top one) capped with the metal L and redguarded where the tile returns flush.
Hi mate, absolutely love the video and the effort gone into trial running this in your own home! So, what are your thoughts on using James Hardie Villaboard for the baseboard detail? Villaboard can be used like plaster and stopped up just the same, it comes in 9mm which would allow for the L-Bead to sit flush with existing 10mm plaster (which is what we use in Australia) Just wondering what your thoughts are on this and whether you see any glaring issue? Thanks from Australia!
Amazing detail, we are building our house in San Juan Bautista, CA and that is the look that we are trying to achieve. Thank you for sharing and definitely will be using this technique in our project. By the way how did you do your the concrete floor. It looks amazing.
Love this method and want to use it but are you ever concerned that having that tiny gap at the floor kind of compromises your air tightness? It feels like a caulked baseboard would be ideal in for that reason. I mean you could also caulk to the floor with your method but it would detract from the aesthetic. I may do this anyways - looks great
We achieve our air tightness from outside our building envelope. We actually welcome some connectivity of our interiors to our walls. Great for potential water leaks, very forgiving.
Densglass comes in 1/2” but if you can’t fine that in your area there are plenty of other 1/2” fiberglass backed gypsum alternatives that go by different names. Some of them are green.