To install carpet start by nailing the tack strips to the floor using 2 nails for each strip.
Install carpet without tack strips.
Tack strips are strips of wood with sharp pointed tacks.
Stretch in carpet installation is the most popular installation methods in homes.
These will grip the carpet backing and hold it in place.
Prepare your stairs for carpet installation by installing tack strips thin pieces of wood resembling yardsticks with tacks pointing upward.
These strips have hundreds of nails that are angled in towards the wall.
Padding is secured to the floor in the middle of the room.
Install tack strips with a gap between the wall.
Without nailing in tack strips i would glue down in order to prevent wrinkles.
This shows the proper tack strip placement to get long lasting and beautiful results out of your carpet install.
Leave a inch between the back of the tack strip and the walls and inch between the back of the tack strip and the entry way of the room where the carpet will stop and a threshold or strip of plastic or metal will be placed.
A small amount of glue at the top and base of each stair can keep it in place.
Install carpet without tack strips small tension rods attached at the base of each stair can be placed to tighten carpet that runs the entire length of the stairs.
For novice diyers the temptation is to shove the carpet tack strips sometimes called tackless.
Next unroll the carpet padding from one side of the room to the other and slice it off with a box cutter.
In this installation strips of wood called tackless strip are nailed or sometimes glued to the floor around the edges of the room.
Install the tackless strips along the edges of the area you are carpeting.
Keep a space equal to about two thirds the thickness of the carpet between the walls and the tack strips using a scrap piece of carpet as a guide.
They are attached to the subfloor around the perimeter of the room to provide the anchor point for the edges of the carpeting to be gripped.
Install tack strips around door frames but not across the threshold to prevent stepping on the sharp points.