you could build a miter box that holds the moulding at the same angle as it is mounted between the wall and ceiling. Lay the moulding against the front and back of the box and cut across the face at a 45 degree when viewed above straight down. If the moulding is setting as it would be installed it should fit
Possibly you mean a 'right angle', which is 90 degrees, like the inside corner of a square. I have never heard of a 'stright angle'.
Four inside angles, all of them being right angles (90 degrees) in each corner. You could also count the four outside angles, outside each corner, each one being 270 degrees. (Adding one inside angle with its outside angle = 360 degrees (a circle)
The corner of a square measures 90 degrees which is a right angle.
90 degrees
60 degrees in each angle
Possibly you mean a 'right angle', which is 90 degrees, like the inside corner of a square. I have never heard of a 'stright angle'.
Possibly you mean a 'right angle', which is 90 degrees, like the inside corner of a square. I have never heard of a 'stright angle'.
If you are doing a 90 degree corner, the miter angles with each be 45 degrees at the cut. If you are doing a corner that is not square - you are going to need a protractor or another device to measure the angle. Square corner or not, the sum of the miter angles will equal the total angle of the corner.
Four inside angles, all of them being right angles (90 degrees) in each corner. You could also count the four outside angles, outside each corner, each one being 270 degrees. (Adding one inside angle with its outside angle = 360 degrees (a circle)
90 degrees, or a right angle.
A corner of 90 degrees is a right angle
A square corner is a 90° angle which is called a "Right angle".
90 degrees90 degrees
A corner of the page of a book
335 degrees
The corner of a square measures 90 degrees which is a right angle.
90 degrees make a right angle. A corner of a piece of paper is an example. :)