Homeowners want to know what size ceiling medallion looks right for their dining room chandelier, whether a medallion can go on a textured ceiling without looking uneven, and how a two-piece medallion is installed around an existing light fixture without removing it. A website that explains ceiling medallion installation earns the trim call. Free mockup, no commitment.
For Ceiling Medallion Installation in KC
Web Design for Ceiling Medallion Installation Companies in Kansas City
Ceiling medallion installation customers are KC homeowners adding a decorative focal point to a dining room chandelier in a 1920s or 1930s Brookside or Waldo bungalow that originally had ornate ceiling plaster details since removed, homeowners in newer KC homes who want to dress a plain ceiling around a pendant fixture or ceiling fan, or homeowners refinishing a parlor or living room and wanting period-appropriate detail that matches the existing crown molding profile. The central education is medallion sizing by fixture and room, two-piece installation for existing fixtures, and texture matching under the medallion — three things that separate a medallion that looks considered from one that looks pasted on. Medallion sizing: the medallion diameter should be 1 inch for every foot of room width — a 12-foot wide dining room calls for a 12-inch medallion as a minimum; for a chandelier with a canopy less than 6 inches in diameter, a 12–16 inch medallion creates proper visual weight; for a chandelier with a larger canopy (8+ inches), a medallion 20–24 inches adds definition without competing with the fixture; the medallion center hole must be larger than the canopy diameter — typically the medallion center is 3.5 inches to fit over standard 4-inch round ceiling boxes; medallions are available in polyurethane (paintable, lightweight, does not crack with KC humidity swings), plaster (period-appropriate for pre-1940 KC homes, heavy, fragile), and PVC (extremely durable, paintable, but profiles are simpler). Two-piece installation: a two-piece or split medallion installs around an existing fixture without removing the fixture — each half slides behind the canopy from opposite sides and joins at the center line; the joint is caulked, filled, and sanded before painting; the finished joint is invisible after painting on a smooth ceiling; on a textured ceiling (orange peel or knockdown, common in KC homes from 1985–2005), the area under the medallion must be scraped smooth before installation — the medallion will not sit flat on texture and the adhesive will not bond to the raised aggregate. Texture matching: after installation, the transition between the smooth ceiling under the medallion perimeter and the surrounding textured ceiling is visible — the smooth ring shows the medallion footprint; the correction is to feather texture from the medallion edge outward with a spray texture gun or texture sponge to blend the transition; this is the detail that makes the medallion look original rather than retrofitted. A ceiling medallion website that explains sizing by room and fixture, two-piece installation, and texture transition earns the homeowner who wants the result to look like it was always there.
What homeowners research before ceiling medallion installation
- Sizing — 1-inch per room-foot rule, chandelier canopy relationship, center hole diameter requirement
- Material — polyurethane vs. plaster vs. PVC, KC humidity stability, period-appropriate for pre-1940 homes
- Two-piece installation — how split medallion installs without removing fixture, joint finishing
- Textured ceiling — why medallion won't sit flat on texture, scraping and smoothing requirement
- Texture matching — feathering transition at medallion perimeter, spray vs. sponge texture application
What your ceiling medallion installation website would include
- Sizing section — room-width rule, chandelier canopy guide, center hole dimension, visual proportion
- Material section — polyurethane humidity stability, plaster for pre-1940 KC bungalows, PVC option
- Two-piece guide — split medallion procedure, joint fill and sand, finished joint appearance
- Textured ceiling section — why scraping is required, smooth patch under medallion footprint
- Texture match section — feathering method, spray vs. sponge, seamless transition approach
- Quote form with room size, fixture canopy size, ceiling texture, existing detail in room, timeline
What clients say
“The texture transition section is the one thing DIYers miss every time. I get calls from homeowners in Waldo who installed a medallion themselves and now there's a smooth white ring around it where the texture was scraped off. The section explaining that the feathering step is part of the installation, not optional, stopped that entirely. Customers in Brookside bungalows with original plaster ceilings are another group — the two-piece section helped them understand they didn't have to take down the chandelier to add a medallion, which was the reason most of them hadn't done it yet.”
— C. Forrest, interior trim and decorative installation, Kansas City, MO
Simple pricing
A ceiling medallion site with sizing section, two-piece installation guide, and quote form starts at $200. A full site with material comparison, textured ceiling content, and texture match guide is $425–$750. One dining room chandelier medallion covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.
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