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Cladding Trim

A tongue and groove cladding run installed to half-wall height needs one final element to look considered rather than unfinished - a trim moulding along the top edge that caps the boards and marks the boundary between the cladded surface below and the wall above. That is exactly what cladding trim does. It is the detail that makes the difference between a cladding installation that looks complete and one that looks like a work in progress.

MR Mouldings' cladding trim range covers five profiles - Astragal, Georgian, Scotia, Half Round, and Bolection - giving you a decorative finishing option whether your interior scheme is contemporary, transitional, or fully period.

Complete your installation with our tongue and groove cladding and dado rails.

 

Original price £50.00 - Original price £70.00
Original price
£50.00
£50.00 - £70.00
Current price £50.00

Bullnosed MDF Rebated Dado Trim

Bullnosed MDF Rebated Dado Trim – Soft Edges, Seamless Finish Finish your wall panelling with style using the Bullnosed MDF Rebated Dado Trim — the...

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Original price £50.00 - Original price £70.00
Original price
£50.00
£50.00 - £70.00
Current price £50.00
Original price £70.00 - Original price £90.00
Original price
£70.00
£70.00 - £90.00
Current price £70.00

Decorative Bullnosed MDF Rebated Dado Trim

Decorative Bullnosed MDF Rebated Dado Trim – Elegant Detail, Seamless Finish Add the perfect blend of soft curves and decorative detail to your wal...

View full details
Original price £70.00 - Original price £90.00
Original price
£70.00
£70.00 - £90.00
Current price £70.00

Cladding Trim Overview

What Does Cladding Trim Do?

When tongue and groove cladding is installed at dado height - running from the skirting board up to the midpoint of the wall - the top edge of the cladding run is the most visible junction in the scheme. Left uncapped, the raw board ends and fixing points are exposed. A cladding trim moulding covers that junction cleanly, creating a deliberate horizontal line that frames the cladding below and provides a natural visual stopping point for the eye.

Think of it as the counterpart to the skirting board at the bottom of the wall - one finishes the floor junction, the other finishes the cladding junction. Together they give the installation a beginning, a middle, and an end.

Astragal Cladding Trim

A small half-round bead flanked by flat shoulders on each side. The astragal has been a staple of British joinery for centuries precisely because it is versatile - refined enough for period rooms, understated enough for contemporary ones. As a cladding trim it adds a quiet decorative note at the top of the run without drawing attention away from the cladding itself.

Georgian Cladding Trim

Stepped and layered, the Georgian profile brings an unmistakably formal character to a cladding installation. The strong horizontal lines created by its tiered cross-section suit entrance halls, dining rooms, and any space where architectural precision is part of the brief. Combine with our Victorian architrave for a consistent period language throughout.

Scotia Cladding Trim

A concave quarter-round that draws the cladding and wall surfaces together with a smooth inward curve rather than a projecting profile. The scotia sits close to the wall, casts minimal shadow, and suits rooms where the cladding scheme is intended to recede into the background rather than announce itself. Particularly effective in spaces finished in a single colour from floor to ceiling.

Pairs well with our thin architrave in minimal interior schemes.

Half Round Cladding Trim

A clean semicircular projection that sits confidently at the top of the cladding run. Where the scotia curves inward, the half round pushes outward - creating a bolder shadow line and a more assertive top edge. Straightforward to cut and join at corners, and equally at home in modern and traditional settings.

Bolection Cladding Trim

The most substantial profile in the range. The bolection stands proud of both the wall and the cladding surface, with a complex curved section that creates deep shadow lines and strong visual presence. It is the profile of choice for formal period rooms - panelled libraries, reception halls, dining rooms - where the moulding scheme is intended to be the defining architectural feature of the space.

For a fully realised period interior, browse our cornices and plinth blocks and rosettes.

Fitting Cladding Trim

Cladding trim is applied after the boards are fixed and before the scheme is painted. Score a level pencil line along the top edge of the cladding run as a guide, apply a continuous bead of grab adhesive to the back of the trim, and press firmly into position. Pin through the face at regular intervals while the adhesive cures. Mitre at 45 degrees at internal and external corners, fill all pin holes, caulk the top and bottom arris where the trim meets wall and cladding respectively, then paint through in the same pass as the rest of the scheme.

Cladding Trim FAQ

What is cladding trim used for?

Cladding trim is a finishing moulding fixed along the top edge of an interior wall cladding run. It caps the boards, conceals raw edges and fixings, and creates a clean horizontal line between the cladded lower wall and the painted surface above. Browse our tongue and groove cladding to see the full interior cladding range it works with.

How do I choose the right cladding trim profile?

Consider the existing moulding language in the room. Scotia suits contemporary and minimal schemes where shadow lines are subtle. Half Round and Astragal work across a broad range of styles. Georgian and Bolection are period profiles best suited to formal or traditional rooms. If you are working across multiple rooms and want consistency, contact our team for advice on which profile works best across the scheme.

Does cladding trim have to match the cladding?

No. The trim profile is independent of the tongue and groove profile below it. The important considerations are proportion - the trim should be wide enough to cover the top edge of the cladding run cleanly - and stylistic compatibility with the room. Browse ourdado rails if you want to see how different top-edge profiles work in a half-wall treatment context.

Can cladding trim be painted the same colour as the cladding?

Yes - and this is the most common approach. Painting the cladding trim, cladding boards, and skirting board in a single colour creates a seamless, considered finish from floor to mid-wall. Alternatively, the trim can be painted in a contrasting or complementary colour to the wall above it, using the trim line as a deliberate colour break.

Is cladding trim the same as a dado rail?

They perform a similar function - both define a horizontal line at mid-wall height - but they are different products. A dado rail is a standalone moulding fixed to a plain wall. Cladding trim is specifically designed to cap the top edge of a cladding installation, covering the board ends and fixings. Browse our dado rail collection if you are working with a plain wall rather than a cladded surface.