Can I install laminate myself or do I need a carpenter?
Short Answer
Small flat surfaces (a single shelf, a small box, a wall panel under 4 ft) are doable as a careful DIY project with contact adhesive and a roller. Anything larger - full wardrobe shutters, kitchen cabinets, curved surfaces, big wall panels - needs an experienced carpenter, because the laminate grabs instantly and any misalignment is permanent, the cut edges have to be perfectly straight, and a router with flush-trim bit is needed to finish the edges cleanly. Hiring a carpenter usually pays for itself in saved wastage.
Detailed Explanation
Laminating is more skill-dependent than people assume. The challenge isn't applying the glue - it's everything that happens after. Contact adhesive grabs the instant the two surfaces touch, so you have ONE chance to position the laminate correctly; once it's down, it's not coming back up cleanly. A misaligned 8×4 ft sheet of laminate is a 3000-6000 rupee write-off. Edge finishing also needs a router with a flush-trim bit to get a clean, straight, factory-quality edge - without that, you end up with chipped or wavy edges that look amateur. If you're doing a small, flat, low-visibility project (a single bookshelf, a small box, a wall panel under 4 feet), it's a reasonable DIY challenge - use a quality contact adhesive, lay dowels across the surface to control placement, roll out air pockets, and trim with a sharp blade. For anything larger or more visible - wardrobe shutters, kitchen cabinets, full-room wall panels, curved surfaces, anything with multiple panels that need to align - hire an experienced carpenter. The labour cost (typically Rs 80-150 per square foot installed in metros) is much less than the cost of replacing a wasted sheet and the finish is dramatically cleaner.
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