Now you don’t have to live with boring builder’s mirrors with no molding. You can DIY your own with lightweight molding and corner blocks. No mitering the corners!
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The mirrors are finished and ready to share so get settled in for LOTS of pics. I’ll try to answer all your questions with pics and instructions, so that all of you can try this at home. I learned again the best way to do this and I think I have it fine-tuned now. I’ll cover it all below in a bulleted list so that you can see all the instructions in one spot. Here’s all the materials being painted. I bought 2 sets of fluted molding. One was real wood and one set was that composite stuff. I’d highly recommend you go with the composite stuff, as it is flat, lightweight and easy to work with. So, keep that in mind. I had some problems because one piece of the “real” fluted molding was slightly bowed. But, I conquered it and made it work. That hideous purple color was a free can of spray paint I got & used as primer. I found the real fluted wood at one Lowes and didn’t see the other composite stuff until I went to another store. So, look around and get the already primed lightweight stuff. Lowes should have it! ![]()
Here you can see the white primed lightweight molding. This is what you want to look for at Lowes or Home Depot. It’s all in the decorative wood section, as well as those corner rosettes. I used black for one bathroom and my trusty Ralph Lauren Turret Stair in the other since I have already painted my vanity in the dark chocolate brown color. ![]()
My miter box comes in handy for cutting molding like this and I plan to put it to use in the dining room too. The composite molding cuts like butter, very easy.
OK, several of you asked about the clips on your mirror. Here’s something that you need to check first. Take out the screws which are holding the mirror in place and see if there is extra mastic or adhesive on the back of the mirror that will still hold it up if you take these clips off. I found that one of mine was stuck with some adhesive on the back and one was not. This is where the Liquid Nails will come in handy. I simply took off both clips on the one mirror, leaned the mirror towards me and shot Liquid Nails all down the back of the mirror, pushed it in place and put the clips back up so it could all dry for at least 24 hours. I checked it the next day and sure enough, it was adhered just fine. So, that’s how to get around the clips. They can definitely be taken down.
You may have a slotted little clip at the bottom of your mirror. You can see mine is pretty corroded and not very attractive. This is flat enough that you can just cover it up with the molding, no problem at all. If you have another kind of holder on your mirror, you’ll probably have to take it off. It’s really not a problem to put some adhesive behind your mirror to hold it up. You can see my backsplash of cultured marble comes up to this point. The molding will rest right on top of this.
You’ll end up with 4 pieces of molding and 4 corner blocks like this. This is the black set.
And this is the brown set. You will want to paint both front and back and ends of the molding pieces.
Now, here’s the bathroom I started in and started out using Liquid Nails with tape added to hold it down. That was a disaster as I said, because some of the “real” wood was bowed and didn’t want to stay down very well. I left it overnight to dry and Liquid Nails takes quite a while to completely dry, so parts of it were coming up. So, I resorted to my hot glue gun on those pieces and it worked like a charm. Should have done that to begin with, but I learned a new lesson on that. Now, just let me tell you this, once you put that hot glue on BE SURE that you get the molding exactly in place the first time. It dries in about 5 seconds and YOU WILL NOT be able to get that piece back off. I learned that the hard way too, after I put in that bottom piece and didn’t have it set exactly right. I had to practically get a crowbar to get that thing off the mirror. It was stuck SO hard on there, so that will tell you that this stuff is not going to come off with the glue gun adhesion. Trust me on that! ![]()
Here’s the BEFORE of the downstairs mirror. Plain ole’ mirror. Wall color in here is Benjamin Moore Wedgewood Gray. Took me 3 tries to get this exactly the way I wanted it. I love this color! It’s not quite as gray as it looks in these pics. It’s a soft blue with a touch of aqua.
Doesn’t that look completely better? I think so. ![]()
If you end up with a small gap, all you have to do is add a little caulk in there, let it dry & touch up with paint.
This one has a few blemishes & if I had it to do over, I would NOT have used the real wood on this. So take that as a lesson. Use the lightweight white primed stuff. Much easier. This pic looks like there are little specks all over, but it’s really not. You can see a little spot of Liquid Nails that shows through on the edge in the mirror peeking out from behind, but since I’m not a perfectionist, I can live with this. If you’re careful and paint the backside of your molding the same color AND you don’t spread too much hot glue, you won’t see any of that.
Another shot of the new molding. And while we’re at it, I’ll show you more of this bathroom, which many of you have already seen, but I have a LOT of new readers now who may not have seen it all.
Here’s my yardsale shelf that I painted black to hold all the pretties in here. This bathroom is right next to the new blue guestroom. ![]()
Someone asked about the side view of the mirror. Here’s what that looks like. You can see blue paint on the edge of the mirror from when I painted the room, but other than that, it looks fine from the edge. I’m actually going to take a small brush and go over that mirror edge with my black paint & it will disappear.
Molding closeup. I went back to Stray Cats on Friday and they had the cutest beadboard hook board just the perfect size for my bathroom, so I picked this one up for $32. I love this little thing, so cute and vintagey. I had to add these pics in too.
I’m playing around with my accessories in here, so some of that will probably change later. ![]()
Don’t you love it?
So, now we move upstairs to the gold bathroom.
Here’s the before of my upstairs bathroom. I’ve showed you this before, but I did a few more pics today since I have my newer camera. The wall color in here is Sherwin Williams Camelback, one shade darker than my Whole Wheat most everywhere else upstairs. That’s my $10 light fixture I found at a yardsale (still brand new in the box). Not exactly what I would have picked out at the store, but it was sure better than the Hollywood light that was up there before. I’ll change that out again one day to something a little less tropical, but I’ve enjoyed it for a couple of years now.
Another lesson learned is to start with the bottom of the mirror to put the first pieces up. Figured that out after I started, so YOU get to do it right. That’s because you have more wiggle room at the top of the mirror than you do at the bottom. Make sense now?
Here’s the whole bathroom.
Doesn’t it look SO much better all framed out? I love it. This is the Turret Stair color.
And I’ve got lots of leopard print in this bathroom.
As well as black iron.
My mom made my black floral shower curtain topper and window treatment several years ago and they still work, so I haven’t changed them out.
Small iron bakers rack in the tub space with hubby’s reading material. 🙂
A couple of yardsale vintage prints on the wall.
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And back to the sink side with the new mirror. I just love it!
Yardsale shelf with mostly yardsale items on here. I’ve got a couple of palm tree things in here, but I’m not really going for all out tropical and I’ll be changing out some of this stuff one day. I’d like to do a little spruce up in here now that the mirror’s framed.
Closeup of the molding.
And here’s the vanity that I painted right after we moved in here. This was white laminate and I primed and painted it with 2 coats of Turret Stair. Look how purdy it looks now with the matching mirror. Whoohooo!
So, I’ll outline all the steps here for you to use when you try this at home:
- Buy the lightweight white preprimed molding and corner pieces. You’ll be glad you did.
- Check to see if your clips are holding up your mirror. If they are not, you can safely take them down. If they are, add some Liquid Nails behind your mirror to adhere it to the wall , let it dry at least 24 hours, and THEN take those clips off.
- Measure your molding pieces before you paint. You’ll just need to measure your mirror EXACTLY from side to side & top to bottom to get the dimensions. Subtract the corner piece measurement from that total and you’ll see how long to cut the wood piece. My corner pieces were 3 1/2” wide x 2, so I subtracted 7” from the total measurement to see how long to cut my 2 top pieces and 2 side pieces. Are you with me on this? It’s simple math and I’m not a math whiz. So, cut your 2 top pieces and 2 side pieces and get them ready to paint.
- Paint all the molding and rosettes first, including the backs, sides and ends.
- Start at the bottom of the mirror and add the first corner piece. Just line it up exactly with the corner of the mirror so it is all flush. Get your glue gun ready, shoot the glue & get it into place FAST. It dries really fast!
- Add the long piece next side to side, just don’t get too much in a hurry, make sure you line up your molding and have it ready to put into place immediately.
- Add the next corner piece. You’ll have a little bit of give in your measuring if you start at the bottom, go across and then go UP.
- Add the 2 long side pieces next.
- Add one rosette at the top, then the next long piece, and finally finish off with the last rosette at the top. You should be able to get most of them all lined up and may not even need to caulk. If you do, that’s not a problem at all either. You may have a few spots that need touching up with paint, so do that last.
So, that’s it! Hope you can follow all these directions and using the hot glue gun is really fast and easy, you just have to be a little careful with slapping those things into place too fast. Cost on this is very reasonable. I used 2 fluted molding pieces at $10 each and 4 each rosettes at about $3 each, so that’s about $32 total plus tax. Great cost for a low-budget makeover and not having to take down those huge mirrors.
I’d love to know if you are doing this, so please come back and show me YOUR finished mirrors! Once you do one, you’ll be hooked!




First of all, thank you. I had already planned to do this to 2 bathrooms in my house–but I was just going to miter the corners. The corner blocks look so much better than the miter cuts would. I am excited now. Thanks again :D.
Well, I have saved every website that had a ‘how to frame your bathroom mirror’ tutorial on it and yours was the first that makes me feel I could run right out and do it. There are no angles to figure out and it looks tasteful too! This will be the framing that I will be doing. Thanks!
That is absolutely gorgeous! I am so inspired to frame my bath mirrors…I have hated them since I moved into this builder’s spec home. This is something I can do myself!!! Love, love it!
If you use liquid nail to adhere the mirror to your wall, will it come down if you ever decide you want to remove the mirror?
HI, April, it might damage the drywall a bit, but it should come down even with Liquid Nails with some tugging. Most of the time, these mirrors don’t come down, so I didn’t worry about that.
Thanks, Rhoda, for such a prompt resonse. Yeah, I don’t really foresee my mirror coming down either. Although I have thought about replacing it with a large framed mirror I already have. I live in a mobile home so the walls aren’t quite as strong. Therefore, this would probably be better. It does look fantastic how you did it, great job!
Thank you so much for your detailed instructions. Everything worked out perfect except the composit molding didn’t hold with the hot glue. Decided to head to Walmart and pick up some liquid nails. While in the same aisle I found Locktite tape, which holds up to 100lbs. So we shall see how well it works!!! Thanks so much!!!
Thanks for your knowledge! We did this yesterday and it looks amazing! Only had to buy the wood and only spent $32. Huge improvement! Again, many thanks!
Thank you for this! I just wanted to say I really like your site here, and you are one very creative woman! 🙂 Thank you <3
Thank you so much for this idea! The hot glue only held for a couple of weeks, so I will be trying some liquid nails next. But overall, this project was a HUGE improvement to my bathrooms!
Any idea’s for renters to do something like this. We are a military family and always moving see haven’t bought yet, but I would LOVE to do something like this spruce up our rental.
HI,Ashley, if you wanted to try this, you could get doublesided tape (the thick foamy stuff) and see if the lightweight wood pieces would stick up with that. Then you should be able to take it down later.
Beautiful! Now all you have to do is paint the door black! Thanks for all the photos.
did you have to sand down your cabinets before painting over them, or do any other prepping?
I framed my mirror today. It looks wonderful. I might try to paint my cabinet next weekend. Thanks for the great idea!
I have done this to several mirrors. I used the light weight stuff from Lowes. If you have to leave the mirror anchors on, just notch out the back of the molding, it’s kind of like foam so it’s easy to do. I also used E-6000 glue to put the borders up. As you said, paint a little on the inside because it will reflect in the mirror and put the adhesive on the outer edge of the molding so it won’t show.
I have an unframed, just clipped,antique round mirror (40″ diameter) hanging in my dining room. I seasonally decorate it with a swag garland on the top but want something permanently to cover top arch as the silvering is worn off. Any ideas?
HI, Lynn, a round mirror would be a challenge and I can’t think of any way to frame a round mirror.
You could make a frame out of that plastic board stuff that is kind of like cardboard and make a mosaic or tile or marbles or something like that that would match your room.
I just saw something for a rope mirror you color the rope and then glue it along the outside looks nice
hey Rhoda!
i have been wanting to do this forever, but i didnt even think of the pretty corners…you are so smart! thank you for sharing!
die
I love the corners and makes this project so much simpler than anything I have seen so far. I have been searching for ideas on what to do with my plain mirrors. I will be adding this to my to do list for 2013 but will bump it up to the top of my list. Thank you so much for sharing. My cabinet is natural color. Although I absolutely love the black, I’m thinking painting the trim white would be the most versatile color?
I just discovered your blog via Pinterest. You have such wonderful and beautiful ideas. Framing my bathroom mirrors is one of this week’s projects and your directions are fantastic. Thank you!