A “lost head” or countersunk finish is a technique where the head of a screw or nail is driven below the surface level, so it is no longer visible. The resulting hole is filled with wood filler or a wooden plug, making the fastener completely disappear — hence the term “lost head.”

When Do You Use a Lost Head Finish?

Application Reason
**Decking boards** Smooth walking surface with no protruding screw heads
**Frames and door edges** Clean finish without visible fixings
**Furniture and cabinets** Professional, seamless appearance
**Floor boards** Screws countersunk for a level surface
**Exterior woodwork** Prevent water from pooling in exposed screw holes

How to Create a Countersunk/Lost Head Finish

Method 1 — Countersink bit

1. Drill a pilot hole (slightly narrower than the screw diameter)

2. Use a countersink bit to create a tapered recess at the top

3. Drive the screw in — the head sits flush or below in the recess

4. Fill the hole with wood filler and sand smooth

Method 2 — Counterbore with wooden plug

1. Drill a circular recess with a Forstner bit (e.g. 10 mm, 5–8 mm deep)

2. Drill a pilot hole through the center for the screw

3. Drive the screw in — the head sits below the surface

4. Glue a wooden plug (from the same timber species) into the recess

5. Trim flush with a chisel and sand — nearly invisible

Setting a Nail Below the Surface

For nails, you can create a lost-head finish by:

What Does It Cost?

Tool Price (approx.)
Countersink bit set £/€ 8–25
Forstner bit set £/€ 15–40
Nail punch / nail set £/€ 5–15
Wooden plugs (bag) £/€ 3–10
Wood filler (tube) £/€ 4–8

DIY is straightforward — with the right tools, a countersunk or lost-head finish is a technique any DIYer can master.

> More guides and building plans: fredsdiyplans.com

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