8 ft wall with 1x3 battens
For a 96 inch wall using 2.5 inch battens, 8 battens gives about 11.2 inches on-center spacing and about 8.7 inches of clear gap.
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For a 96 inch wall using 2.5 inch battens, 8 battens gives about 11.2 inches on-center spacing and about 8.7 inches of clear gap.
For a 120 inch wall using 2.5 inch battens, 10 battens gives about 13.1 inches on-center spacing and about 10.6 inches of clear gap.
For a 144 inch wall using 3.5 inch battens, 11 battens gives about 14.1 inches on-center spacing and about 10.6 inches of clear gap.
For a wainscoting-height treatment, plan the rail height first, usually 32 to 42 inches. Then calculate batten spacing from wall width, not from wall height.
For a window wall, center the layout visually first. Decide whether battens should align to window trim, frame the window, or keep equal bays on each side.
Most interior board and batten walls look balanced with 8 to 16 inches of clear gap between battens. Narrow gaps feel more traditional; wider gaps feel more modern. The best spacing is the one that divides evenly across your exact wall width.
For painted interior walls, 1x3 and 1x4 battens are the most common. A 1x3 is usually 2.5 inches actual width, and a 1x4 is usually 3.5 inches actual width. Use actual board dimensions in spacing calculations.
MDF is smooth, affordable, and excellent for painted walls in dry rooms. Primed pine is lighter and more tolerant of humidity, so it is usually the better choice for bathrooms, mudrooms, or basements.
Top and bottom rails should be fastened into studs where possible. Vertical battens can usually be attached with brad nails and adhesive, but layout and wall conditions matter.
Use ChatDIY to turn your wall dimensions into a spacing plan, materials list, cut list, and step-by-step installation plan.