Comments 1 from the pic it appears to be installed correctly.
Crown molding tile transition.
I d keep the bottom of the filler strip even with the bottom edge of the crown.
Thinking to myself in 2010 how does a person paint stair.
It ll simply look like the crown is thicker where it s padded out.
The crown transition can be easily handled by padding out the wall with a filler strip of wood behind the crown.
If you need a drawing for clarity let me know.
Using a piece of crown molding as a reference nail the board to the wall slightly above the bottom edge of the crown.
The answer was simple but i ll admit i had to think on it.
What on earth do i do with the crown molding as it transitions from the tiled shower to the wall.
I might have suggested to build the crown out the thickness of the tile and continue the crown around the shower over the tile so you would not get the finish you have.
Taking tile all the way up to the ceiling in the master bathroom had an unanticipated puzzle.
The answer was simple but i ll admit i had to think on it.
Make a template by aligning a small piece of crown molding with the edges of a sheet of paper.
Cut a strip of wood thinner than your crown moulding and the same width as your sheets of tile.
Crown molding transitions against tile shower.
Trace along the back of the molding to make a pattern.
Let one edge of the paper represent the wall and one edge the ceiling.
Start tiling directly under the board mark the location of your studs we did.