Finish carpentry is the last thing done and the first thing people notice. On this Lititz interior we installed crown molding and a full trim package that lifted a plain set of rooms into something that reads finished and considered. Crown at the ceiling line, clean casing at the openings, and careful coped corners are the details that make a room feel custom without touching its structure.

What the Lititz interior finishing project involved
A trim package ties a room together, and the corners are where the quality shows. The scope covered:
- Crown molding installed along the ceiling line
- Coped inside corners for tight joints that stay closed
- Clean door and window casing throughout
- Careful fitting to walls and ceilings that were not perfectly square
- Filled, sanded, and painted joints for a seamless finish
Why the corners make the room
Crown sits at an angle where the wall meets the ceiling, and older homes are rarely perfectly square, so a good installer reads the actual room and copes the inside corners rather than simply mitering them. That is what keeps the joints tight through the seasons and makes the crown look built-in. For understanding professional finish credentials, NARI is a helpful reference.

Considering a trim upgrade?
Crown and trim work is part of our interior finishing service, and our guide on crown molding installation explains why the corners matter.
Want rooms that feel finished? Get a free estimate and we will show you what clean trim looks like.



