
I'm looking to replace some bedroom (well, home office-room) window molding with something I find less, well, ugly. I prefer not to replace it with different molding, because then I'd be mismatching the closet / door molding and it's a whole other can of worms. So... I'd like to uh.. somehow, make it trimless.I have reason to believe possibly behind the molding is actually a nicely lined up framing job where everything is already pretty flush. Assuming that is the case... How.. exactly do I go about finishing trimless?Maybe I need to take a step back first. How do I go about removing a piece of molding to check what's behind it? While still being able to replace it? I was told a 5-in-1 tool and some extra care.. is this reasonable?Now, assuming I get back there and it looks, as expected, something like this:https://ift.tt/2Fz8APa the process to turn that into an actual finished trimless window? I know it's probably something involving plaster lol. I have honestly tried to look into this and the more I dig into drywall returns and jam extensions the less I actually understand what I was looking at. HALP!Edit: tearaway bead? Am I getting closer?Edit 2: alright I think I'm almost there... If it's beaded / mudded then it's a drywall return. If there's trim then it's just the jamb or a wood casing. So when I remove the trim j should find some sort of wood jamb / jam extensions / casing. Is it possible to just add some sort of joint bead from here and mud away? Or do I have to replace the wood with drywall? via /r/DIY https://ift.tt/2rdguIT