The room perimeter is a frame that gathers space, creating a visual boundary between floor and walls, walls and ceiling. Without this frame, the room appears unfinished: the floor ends abruptly against the wall with a rough joint, the ceiling meets the wall at a sloppy angle, walls are merely vertical planes without structure.Wooden skirting boardsWooden ceiling baseboardwooden wall profile— these are elements that create this frame, transforming a set of planes into an architectural space, where every boundary is finished, completed, and thoughtfully designed.Wooden baseboard— this is not a minor detail added at the end of renovation. It is a fundamental element of interior architecture that determines how space is perceived by the eye: as a random set of surfaces or as a thoughtfully composed arrangement, where everything is in its place.

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Room perimeter: how skirting board and profile unite space into a cohesive whole

The room perimeter has three levels: bottom (boundary between floor and wall), top (boundary between ceiling and wall), middle (horizontal profiles on walls, optional). Each level must be finished with trim that covers the joint, protects vulnerable zones, and creates a decorative line. The bottom level —wooden floor baseboardwhich frames the floor, covers the gap between floor and wall (technical gap of 10-15 mm, necessary to compensate for floor thermal expansion), protects the lower part of the wall from impacts, scratches, moisture, and creates the visual base of the room. Without a floor skirting board, the room appears unfinished, the floor is cut off, and walls lack a foundation.

The top level —Ceiling skirting board made of wood, height 100-150 mm, enhances the perception of ceiling height.(ceiling cornice), which frames the ceiling, covers the joint between ceiling and wall, and creates the visual crown of the room. Ceiling trim visually separates the ceiling from walls, making the room appear higher (the horizontal line under the ceiling draws the eye upward), and creates a sense of completion. Without ceiling trim, the ceiling simply meets the wall at a right angle — functionally sufficient, aesthetically poor. The middle level — horizontal profiles on walls (optional, not in all interiors), which divide the wall into upper and lower parts, create proportions, and structure the vertical. A horizontal profile at a height of 80-100 cm from the floor — a classic approach, where the lower part of the wall (panel) is finished differently than the upper part (main wall).

All three levels must be coordinated: one wood species (oak, beech, pine), one color (natural wood under varnish or oil, or painted in a single color), related profiles (floor skirting, ceiling trim, horizontal profile must have similar shapes — belong to the same family). Consistency creates a visual frame that unites space into a cohesive whole: bottom, middle, top are connected, forming a system where each line complements the other. Inconsistency (oak floor skirting, painted pine ceiling trim, plastic horizontal profile) destroys unity, creates chaos, where each element stands alone, no connection, no system.

Visual rhythm of the perimeter: the eye reads horizontal lines as levels. The bottom level (floor skirting) — darkest or brightest (if contrasting with the floor), most substantial (height 60-150 mm, thickness 15-25 mm). The top level (ceiling trim) — lighter, narrower (width 40-120 mm, thickness 10-20 mm), often lighter (if ceiling is light). The middle level (horizontal profile, if present) — intermediate in mass and color. This vertical gradation (heavy bottom, light top) creates visual stability, the feeling that the room stands on a solid foundation (substantial skirting), rises upward (walls), and is crowned with a light finish (thin cornice). Disrupting the gradation (thin skirting, heavy cornice) creates visual instability and discomfort.

Functionality of the perimeter: skirting boards and profiles are not only decorative but also functional. Floor skirting covers the gap between floor and wall, behind which cables (wires for internet, TV, power sockets) are hidden, protects the wall from moisture (when cleaning floors, water does not penetrate the joint), and from impacts (vacuum cleaners, furniture during rearrangement hit the skirting, not the wall). Ceiling trim hides defects at the junction between ceiling and wall (if the joint is uneven, the trim covers the unevenness), masks LED strip lighting (hidden backlighting behind the cornice creates soft diffused light). Horizontal profile protects the wall at the height of chair and sofa backs (the wall above the profile is clean, below — may be dirty, but the profile creates a boundary, above which the wall is protected).Buy wooden skirting boards— needed not only for aesthetics but also for function — a comprehensive solution.

Wooden skirting board: functionality and aesthetics

Floor baseboard woodperforms four functions simultaneously: covering the gap (between floor and wall, technical gap of 10-15 mm, skirting covers it), cable routing (wires hidden behind skirting run around the room to outlets and switches), wall protection (lower 10-15 cm of wall are exposed to impacts, scratches, moisture — skirting protects), decorative finish (skirting creates a visual boundary between floor and wall, finishes the floor at the bottom, finishes the wall at the bottom). Without skirting, the gap between floor and wall is visible (looks like a defect), wires dangle on the floor (danger of tripping, unattractive), walls quickly get dirty and damaged at the bottom (require repair after one or two years), and the room appears unfinished.

Wooden baseboardAdvantages of wooden skirting over plastic or MDF: natural texture (wood is visible, especially oak or beech — texture acts as decoration), durability (wooden skirting doesn't chip from impact, doesn't peel, retains shape for decades), repairability (scratched wooden skirting can be sanded and repainted — like new; plastic or MDF with film cannot be repaired, only replaced), eco-friendliness (wood breathes, does not emit harmful substances, unlike plastic). Disadvantage of wooden skirting — price (2-3 times more expensive than plastic), sensitivity to humidity (with humidity fluctuations, wood dries or swells, requiring compensation gaps during installation). But for quality interiors, wooden skirting is the only correct choice.

The height of the floor skirting affects the perception of room proportions: low skirting (40-60 mm) is neutral, does not affect proportions, suitable for small rooms with low ceilings (high skirting visually lowers the ceiling, making the room appear even lower). Medium skirting (70-90 mm) — standard for most interiors, balancing function (hides enough cables, protects walls) and aesthetics (not too bulky, not too thin). High skirting (100-150 mm) — for spacious rooms with high ceilings (2.8-3.5 meters), creates visual weight and scale, characteristic of classical interiors (Empire, Classicism), for residences.Wide Wooden Skirting Board(100-150 mm) visually 'grounds' the room, making it stable and substantial, but requires appropriate ceilings (in a room with 2.5-meter ceilings, wide skirting will be excessive, overloading the bottom).

Wall skirting profile determines the style: simple profile (rectangular strip with bevel on top) — modern style, minimalism, simplicity. Medium profile (one to two rounded edges, transitions) — neoclassicism, universal option suitable for most interiors. Complex profile (three to four tiers, protrusions, recesses, curved transitions) — classic, baroque, where detail and richness of form are important. Skirting profile should match profiles of other elements (baseboards, moldings, ceiling cornice) — belong to the same family of forms. Skirting thickness is usually 15–25 mm (depends on profile complexity: simple profile is thinner, complex profile is thicker). Thick skirting appears heavier, protrudes above the wall, creating a pronounced boundary. Thin skirting is lighter, almost blends with the wall, acts as a fine line.

Installationof wooden floor skirting boardMounting to the wall (not to the floor!) using screws (if wall is concrete or brick — screws + anchors, if gypsum board — screws into metal profile of frame) or adhesive (liquid nails, polyurethane adhesive — for flat walls where skirting fits tightly). Screws are more reliable (skirting won’t detach over time), but screw heads are visible (they need to be countersunk, spackled, sanded, painted). Adhesive is invisible (no screw heads), but requires perfectly flat walls (if wall is curved, skirting won’t fit, adhesive won’t hold). Combination of adhesive + screws — optimal for wooden skirting: adhesive creates surface contact, screws provide backup (if adhesive weakens, screws hold). Skirting corners join at 45 degrees (internal and external corners — with a miter saw, precise cut) or with corner elements (pre-made corners into which skirting strips are inserted — simpler but more expensive, not always aesthetically pleasing).

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Ceiling skirting made of wood and wooden wall profile

Wooden ceiling baseboardCornice (ceiling trim) frames the ceiling, creating a visual finish, separating ceiling from walls.Ceiling baseboard woodenTypically has width 40–120 mm (from wall to edge of cornice — projection width on ceiling), thickness 10–20 mm, complex profile (multiple tiers, protrusions, recesses). Narrow cornice (40–60 mm) — light line under ceiling, indicating boundary but not dominating. Medium cornice (70–100 mm) — standard for most interiors, creates pronounced boundary. Wide cornice (110–150 mm) — for high ceilings (2.8–3.5 meters), creates monumentality, characteristic of classical interiors.

Functions of ceiling skirting: covers the junction between ceiling and wall (if junction is uneven, cornice covers the defect), conceals hidden lighting (LED strip hidden behind cornice, lighting upward on ceiling — creates soft diffused lighting, ceiling appears to float), visually increases ceiling height (horizontal cornice line draws the eye upward, making ceiling appear higher).Wooden ceiling baseboardUsed in interiors where material unity is important: if floor skirting is wooden, ceiling skirting should also be wooden (same species, color, finish). Plastic ceiling cornice is cheaper (200–300 rubles per meter vs 400–700 rubles for wooden), but visually cheapens the interior — material difference is noticeable.

Ceiling cornice profile should match floor skirting profile: if floor skirting has two rounded edges, ceiling cornice should have a similar motif (rounded edges, but possibly in a lighter version — one rounded edge instead of two). If floor skirting has a complex profile (multi-tiered), cornice should also be complex (but usually slightly simpler than floor skirting — top lighter than bottom, visual logic). Cornice thickness is usually less than floor skirting thickness (cornice 10–15 mm, skirting 15–25 mm) — top lighter than bottom. Cornice color may match floor skirting color (single room frame) or ceiling color (cornice painted to match ceiling, blending in, only relief stands out).

Ceiling cornice installation: mounting to the wall (not to the ceiling!) using screws or adhesive. Cornice presses against ceiling with top part, against wall with bottom part, mounted to wall with screws (screw heads countersunk, spackled, painted) or adhesive (liquid nails, polyurethane adhesive). If cornice is light (narrow, pine or MDF), adhesive alone is sufficient. If cornice is heavy (wide, oak or beech), better to use adhesive + screws. Cornice corners join at 45 degrees (miter saw, precise cut, profile matches on both strips) or with corner elements (pre-made corners). For hidden lighting, cornice is mounted with 5–10 cm gap from ceiling (cornice mounted below ceiling, space behind cornice where LED strip is laid).

wooden wall profileHorizontal strips that divide walls into sections, creating proportions. Horizontal profile at 80–100 cm from floor — classic technique, where wall is divided into panel (lower part) and main wall (upper part). Panel may be finished differently: painted in different color (lower part dark, upper part light), clad with wooden panels (lower part wood, upper part wallpaper), covered with different texture wallpaper. Profile frames panel above, creating boundary that separates lower and upper parts. Width of horizontal profile is usually 50–80 mm, medium complexity profile (one to two rounded edges), thickness 12–18 mm. Profile should match skirtings (floor and ceiling) — belong to same family of forms, creating vertical system (lower — middle — upper parts coordinated).

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Wide wooden skirting and wide wooden floor skirting: when is 'heavy base' justified

Wide Wooden Skirting BoardHeight 100–150 mm is justified in three cases: high ceilings (2.8–3.5 meters and above — wide skirting proportional to height, creates scale), classical style (Empire, classicism, English style — where monumentality, solidity, visual weight are important), need to hide large number of cables (dozens of wires — internet, TV, socket power, lighting control — fit behind wide skirting).Wide wooden floor skirting boardCreates 'heavy base' — visual foundation of room that makes space stable, grounded, serious.

When wide skirting is not justified: low ceilings (2.5 meters and below — wide skirting visually lowers ceiling, makes room low and cramped), small rooms (area less than 15–20 square meters — wide skirting overloads, creates feeling of confinement), modern minimalism (where simplicity, thin lines are important — wide skirting is too bulky, disrupts style). In these cases, better to use medium skirting (70–90 mm) or even low (40–60 mm) — more proportional, lighter, doesn’t overload space.

Visual effect of wide skirting: room appears lower (wide skirting visually 'eats' wall height, ceiling appears closer), but more stable (wide base creates impression that room stands on solid foundation). Wide skirting suits spacious living rooms, halls, formal rooms where monumentality and prestige are important. Not suitable for bedrooms, children’s rooms, offices where coziness and intimacy are important (wide skirting is too formal, cold). Wide skirting requires corresponding doors: if skirting is 120 mm high, door casings must be proportional (minimum width 80–90 mm), otherwise door will look disproportionate (thin casings against bulky skirting).

Profile of wide skirting is usually complex: multiple tiers (three to four transitions), protrusions, recesses, rounded edges, grooves. Complex profile is justified on wide strip (height 100–150 mm provides space for detailing), creates visual richness characteristic of classic style. Simple profile (flat strip with bevel) on wide skirting looks unfinished, like a board stuck to wall. Wide skirting made of oak or beech — premium solution: texture visible throughout height (especially oak — large pores, contrasting rings work as decoration), maximum durability (oak withstands impacts, scratches for decades), longevity 30–50 years. Wide skirting made of pine under opaque paint — budget option: texture hidden by paint, lower durability (pine softer, scratches more easily), but 3–4 times cheaper.

Installation of wide skirting requires perfectly flat walls: if wall is curved (5–10 mm deviation per meter), wide skirting won’t fit, gaps form which spoil appearance. Narrow skirting is more flexible, adapts to wall irregularities (presses with screws, compensates small curvatures). Wide skirting is rigid, doesn’t bend, requires flat surface. If walls are uneven, before installing wide skirting, they must be leveled (plaster, gypsum board) or use narrow skirting. Mounting wide skirting only with adhesive is unreliable (heavy, may detach) — screws required: one screw every 40–60 cm, screw heads countersunk 2–3 mm, spackled with wood spackle, sanded, painted to match skirting.

Prices and calculations: wooden skirting price, rate and price per meter

Wooden baseboard priceDepends on wood species, height, profile complexity, finish. Pine skirting (height 60 mm, simple profile, no finish) — 200–300 rubles per linear meter. Pine skirting (height 100 mm, medium profile, no finish) — 300–450 rubles per linear meter. Beech skirting (height 80 mm, medium profile, no finish) — 400–600 rubles per linear meter. Beech skirting (height 120 mm, complex profile, no finish) — 600–850 rubles per linear meter. Oak skirting (height 100 mm, medium profile, no finish) — 600–900 rubles per linear meter. Oak skirting (height 140 mm, complex profile, no finish) — 900–1300 rubles per linear meter.

wooden skirting board pricingWith finish (oil, varnish, paint) costs 30–50% more: manufacturer applies finish on production, adding cost of material (oil, varnish) and labor (application, drying, sanding between layers). Oak skirting 100 mm height with oil finish — 800–1200 rubles per linear meter. Beech skirting 80 mm height painted white — 550–800 rubles per linear meter. It’s more economical to buy skirting without finish and paint on-site (saving 30–50%), but requires time, equipment (sprayer or brush), skill (painting skirting with profile evenly is difficult). Ready-painted skirting is more expensive but more convenient: delivered, installed, ready.

Price of wooden floor skirtingComposed of: material (pine, beech, oak wood), processing (planing, profiling, sanding), finish (optional: oil, varnish, paint), packaging (stretch film, cardboard), delivery (truck transport to site).Price of wooden skirting per meterStandard unit of measurement: skirting sold by linear meters, standard plank length 2.2–2.5 meters, required meters cut from planks (leftover pieces become waste, so 10–15% extra for cuts).

Calculating skirting length: room perimeter minus door openings width plus allowance for cuts. Room 4×5 meters, perimeter = (4+5)×2 = 18 meters, one door 0.8 meters wide, total skirting needed = 18 - 0.8 = 17.2 meters, with 15% allowance = 17.2 × 1.15 = 19.78 ≈ 20 meters. If skirting plank is 2.5 meters long, need 20 / 2.5 = 8 planks. At 600 rubles per meter, cost for this room = 20 × 600 = 12,000 rubles. Apartment 100 square meters, three rooms, kitchen, hallway, total perimeter of all rooms ≈ 80 meters, minus doors (7 doors × 0.8 meters = 5.6 meters), total 74.4 meters, with 15% allowance = 85.5 meters. At 600 rubles per meter, cost for entire apartment = 85.5 × 600 = 51,300 rubles.

Additional costs: corners (internal and external — if using pre-made corner elements instead of 45-degree miter cuts, cost per corner 150–300 rubles, number of corners in apartment 20–40, total 3,000–12,000 rubles), end caps (if skirting ends not at corner but against door or protrusion, end is covered with cap, cost 50–100 rubles per piece), cable channel (if skirting has built-in cable channel, price 20–30% higher, but easier to hide wires). Skirting installation (if hiring installers): 150–250 rubles per linear meter (includes mounting, corner cuts, screw head spackling). For apartment with 85 meters of skirting, installation = 85 × 200 (average price) = 17,000 rubles.

Wooden skirting Moscow, wooden skirting SPB, wooden floor skirting SPB

wooden skirting board St. PetersburgProduced from imported wood (oak from Europe, Caucasus, Central Russia; beech from Germany, Caucasus; pine from Leningrad, Arkhangelsk regions), but processing is St. Petersburg — on modern Weinig, SCM, Homag equipment.Wooden baseboard St. PetersburgMade from imported wood (oak from Europe, the Caucasus, central Russia; beech from Germany, the Caucasus; pine from Leningrad and Arkhangelsk regions), but processed in St. Petersburg — on modern Weinig, SCM, Homag equipment.

Wooden skirting MoscowMoscow is the largest market for skirting boards, with high demand (Moscow and its region’s population exceeds 20 million, construction and renovation are ongoing). There are many resellers (markup of 20-30% for logistics and the Moscow market), prices are 10-15% higher than in St. Petersburg. There are fewer manufacturers (expensive rent in Moscow, production is relocated to the Moscow region — Korolev, Mytischi, Khimki, Noginsk), but there are many warehouses, wide assortment, everything is in stock. Moscow’s climate (continental, cold winters, hot summers) creates humidity fluctuations: in winter, in heated rooms, humidity drops to 30-40% (wood dries out), in summer it rises to 60-70% (wood swells). A wooden skirting board purchased in Moscow in winter may develop gaps in summer (if compensatory gaps are not accounted for during installation).

Buy wooden skirting board in MoscowAvailable at warehouses (large warehouses in Mytischi, Khimki, Korolev — standard profiles in stock, shipment within the same day of order) or ordered from production (custom profiles, non-standard height or length, minimum order of 100 linear meters, manufacturing time 2-4 weeks). Delivery within Moscow 2000-5000 rubles (depends on volume and distance from the warehouse — MKAD or beyond).wooden skirting buy in SPbCheaper: warehouses within the city limits (Kushel’evskaya Road, Sofiyskaya, Obvodny Canal), delivery to St. Petersburg 1500-3500 rubles, prices 10-15% lower than in Moscow. For Moscow residents, it is advantageous to order skirting boards from St. Petersburg with delivery (600 km, delivery 5000-8000 rubles for a GAZEL) — for large volumes (over 200 meters), savings outweigh delivery cost.

Regional characteristics: St. Petersburg prefers light wood species (beech, oak) and finishes (white and gray skirting boards are characteristic of Petersburg interiors — Scandinavian influence, northern aesthetics). Moscow prefers dark wood species (oak, walnut) and natural wood with lacquer (displaying status and material richness). Regions (Yekaterinburg, Novosibirsk, Kazan, Krasnodar) often order skirting boards from Moscow or St. Petersburg (local production is limited, narrow assortment) with delivery via transport companies (PEK, Delovye Liniy, KIT — cost 1000-3000 rubles per 100 kg, delivery time 5-15 days depending on distance).

How to buy wooden skirting boards for floor and ceiling under one project

Buy wooden skirting boardsFloor and ceiling skirting boards must be purchased from one manufacturer in one batch — guarantee that the wood species is the same (tone will match), profiles are coordinated (belong to the same family of forms), finish is identical (sanding, coating are the same). Buying from different manufacturers almost always leads to discrepancies: light oak floor skirting board, dark oak ceiling cornice (different wood batches), incompatible profiles (one simple, another complex — visual mismatch). One manufacturer, one collection of profiles, one batch — this is the guarantee of unity.

Purchase algorithm for skirting boards under project: measure the perimeter of all rooms (bedrooms, hallway, kitchen) for floor skirting boards, subtract door openings width, add 15% for waste — obtain floor skirting board meterage. Measure the perimeter of all rooms for ceiling cornice (if planned), add 15% for waste — obtain ceiling cornice meterage. Choose wood species as one for both levels (oak, beech or pine — if everything will be painted with opaque paint, species is not critical; if transparent coating, species must be premium — oak or beech). Choose profiles from one manufacturer’s collection: floor skirting board profile A, ceiling cornice profile B (related to profile A, from the same family of forms).

Prepare specification (table: element name, profile, height/width, plank length, meterage, wood species, finish, coating). Example specification for 100 m² apartment: floor skirting board profile "Classic-01", height 100 mm, planks 2.5 meters, quantity 85 meters, species oak, finish sanded, coating dark oil. Ceiling cornice profile "Classic-02" (related to floor skirting board), width 80 mm, planks 2.5 meters, quantity 75 meters, species oak, finish sanded, coating dark oil. Send specification to manufacturer, receive cost and delivery time estimate.

Color and coating coordination: if transparent coating (oil, lacquer) is ordered, request samples from manufacturer (small planks coated with the same oil). Check texture appearance, ensure floor skirting board and ceiling cornice tone match (must be identical — from the same wood batch). If tone mismatch occurs, request correction: use tinted oil (oil with pigment that equalizes color). If opaque paint is ordered, ensure both elements have identical color (same paint, applied uniformly on production).

Storage until installation: store skirting boards in dry, heated room (humidity 40-60%, temperature 18-25°C), horizontally (on flat surface, planks do not touch each other — spacers between layers), wrapped (stretch film protects from dust and moisture). Do not store outdoors, do not store in unheated rooms in winter, do not store vertically leaning against walls (long planks will warp). Acclimatization: after delivery to site, let skirting boards rest 3-5 days before installation — wood adapts to room humidity and temperature, dimensions stabilize, installation proceeds without surprises.

Joint examples: skirting board joint with door block, casing, profile and cornice

Joint 1 — floor skirting board joint with door casing: skirting board runs along room perimeter, approaches door opening from both sides, rests against casing. Joint is finished in two ways: skirting board rests against casing flush (skirting board end is cut perpendicular to casing side plane — joint is visible, but if skirting board and casing are same species and color, joint is neat), or skirting board is cut at 45 degrees (skirting board end is cut at 45 degrees, meets casing diagonally — joint is less noticeable, but more complex to execute). Skirting board thickness and casing thickness should be close (difference no more than 5 mm), otherwise a step will appear at the joint, which looks unattractive.

Skirting board profile and casing profile must match: if skirting board has two rounded edges, casing should have similar rounding (not necessarily two, one is sufficient — related form). If skirting board has simple profile (flat plank with bevel), casing is also simple. Skirting board and casing color must match: both natural wood under lacquer (tone identical), or both painted in one color (white, gray, black). If skirting board is natural oak and casing is painted beech — difference is noticeable, joint looks poorly thought out. Unity of species, profile, color — key to neat joint.

Joint 2 — floor skirting board joint with ceiling cornice at room corner: at room corner, three planes converge (floor, two walls, ceiling), three skirting board elements meet (floor skirting boards from both sides of corner, ceiling cornice from both sides of corner). Floor skirting boards meet at corner at 45 degrees (internal angle — dado saw, precise cut, tight joint). Ceiling cornices meet at the same angle at 45 degrees (above skirting boards, under ceiling). Between floor skirting board and ceiling cornice — vertical wall, which may be painted, wallpapered, or panelled. Floor skirting board and ceiling cornice visually frame the wall from top and bottom, creating a frame.

Skirting board and cornice profiles must match: if skirting board is 100 mm high with two rounded edges, cornice 80 mm wide should have one rounded edge (simplified version of skirting board, top lighter than bottom). Skirting board thickness is usually greater than cornice thickness (skirting board 18-25 mm, cornice 10-15 mm — bottom heavier than top, visual logic). Skirting board and cornice color may match (single room frame, all in one tone) or differ (skirting board dark to match floor color, cornice light to match ceiling color — contrast creates dynamism). But species must be the same (both oak or both beech), otherwise under transparent coating, texture difference is noticeable.

Joint 3 — floor skirting board joint with horizontal wall profile (panel wall): wall divided by horizontal profile at 100 cm from floor. Lower part of wall (panel) is finished differently (e.g., painted with dark paint), upper part (main wall) is light. Horizontal profile frames panel from above, creating a boundary. Floor skirting board frames panel from below. At room corner, three elements meet: floor skirting board (bottom), horizontal profile (middle, 100 cm height), ceiling cornice (top, under ceiling). All three elements must be coordinated: same species, related profiles, single color or thought-out contrast (bottom dark, middle medium, top light — gradient from dark to light creates visual lightness).

Horizontal profile meets at corner at 45 degrees (like skirting board and cornice). Horizontal profile thickness is usually 12-18 mm (thinner than floor skirting board, but thicker than ceiling cornice — intermediate level). Horizontal profile width is 50-80 mm (narrower than floor skirting board, but wider than ceiling cornice — or vice versa, depending on proportions). Horizontal profile must match skirting board and cornice profiles: all three elements have rounded edges (related forms), or all three are simple (flat planks with bevel). Profile mismatch (skirting board complex, profile simple, cornice complex) creates visual chaos, where middle element falls out of system.

Conclusion: STAVROS — single line from floor to ceiling

Wooden skirting boardswooden floor baseboardCeiling skirting board made of wood, height 100-150 mm, enhances the perception of ceiling height.Wooden profileThis is not separate elements purchased in different places. This is a unified system that frames the room around its perimeter, creating a visual frame, connecting floor, walls, ceiling into a single architectural space.Wooden baseboardwooden baseboardwith a classic profile creates a sense of solidity, reliability.Ceiling baseboard woodenWooden ceiling baseboardAll elements must be coordinated by species, profiles, color, ordered from one manufacturer in one batch.

STAVROS produces a complete system of wooden skirting boards and profiles:floor skirting boardsin all heights (from 40 to 150 mm), all profiles (from simple to complex classic),Ceiling Moldingin all widths (from 40 to 120 mm),wall profiles(horizontal moldings for dividing walls into panels). Species: pine (budget option, 200-450 rubles per meter), beech (balance of price and quality, 400-850 rubles per meter), oak (premium, 600-1300 rubles per meter).Wide Wooden Skirting BoardWide wooden floor skirting board(100-150 mm) — for high ceilings, classic interiors, where monumentality is important.

wooden skirting board purchaseand paint it to the desired shade — standard practice in modern design. It is important to use special wood finishes that allow the material to breathe.wooden skirting boards for floor purchaseAvailable from warehouses in St. Petersburg and Moscow (standard profiles in stock) or ordered from production (custom profiles, non-standard height).Wooden baseboard pricewooden skirting board pricingPrice of wooden floor skirtingPrice of wooden skirting per meterTransparent pricing, all prices on the website, calculator for calculating meterage and cost.

wooden skirting board St. Petersburgwooden skirting buy in SPb