Kitchen Style - Cabinets - Door styles
How the cabinet
door fits over the cabinet box determines its basic type.
Your options for door type include:
- Inset
- Lipped
- Partial overlay
- Full overlay
Inset doors sit
within the rails and stiles and lay flush with the front edges of the cabinet
box. Truly inset doors are only available with a framed construction, but
designers can achieve the same look using vertical pilasters on frameless
cabinets.
Lipped doors are routed with a slight wooden groove to fit over the face frame.
Partial overlay doors somewhat conceal the frame, while full overlay doors have
less than one-eighth of an inch between them. Frameless cabinets have full
overlay doors but some framed cabinets have them as well. You can tell for sure
whether a cabinet is framed or frameless by opening a door and checking for
rails and stiles.
How the
cabinet door fits over the cabinet box determines its basic type.
Your options for door type include:
- Inset
- Lipped
- Partial overlay
- Full overlay
Inset doors
sit within the rails and stiles and lay flush with the front edges of the
cabinet box. Truly inset doors are only available with a framed construction,
but designers can achieve the same look using vertical pilasters on frameless
cabinets.
Lipped doors are routed with a slight wooden groove to fit over the face
frame. Partial overlay doors somewhat conceal the frame, while full overlay
doors have less than one-eighth of an inch between them. Frameless cabinets
have full overlay doors but some framed cabinets have them as well. You can
tell for sure whether a cabinet is framed or frameless by opening a door and
checking for rails and stiles.
Besides door type, you’ll want to consider different door shapes. One cabinet
manufacturer may offer hundreds of door styles in an endless array of
finishes.
Your options for door style include:

Recessed panel
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Raised panel
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Curved panel
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Beadboard panel
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Flat slab
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While the
door’s type and shape may supply the backbeat, its color and decoration add
rhythm and harmony. A flat slab, oak door stained with a light color, for
example, will sing a much different tune than a flat slab, MDF door covered
in stainless steel.
Like the finest furniture, the highest quality cabinets are finished in
multiple steps, which might include hand sanding, rubbing with steel wool,
and hand buffing. Compare it to painting: You want to apply several thin
layers so that if it chips it won’t all peel off. The multiple steps also
help create a smoother texture and a deeper color.
Your options for how to decorate the door include:
- Stain
- Wood veneer
- Paint
- Polyester
- Plastic laminate
- Stainless steel
- Glass
Stain
Manufacturers
use all different names for stain colors. One company’s “amber” may not look
anything like another’s with the same name. Think in terms of tone. Choose
the wood you prefer and then decide whether a stain with a light, medium, or
dark tone will best achieve the effect you’re after.
Your choice
of wood will have the most impact on the cabinet’s ultimate look. If you want
a light look, for example, you might start with a light wood like ash, beech,
birch, elm, oak, maple, or chestnut. In the mid-range, consider cherry with a
natural finish. Or you can stain maple to be darker than its natural
color.
For a dark kitchen, you’d want to start with a wood that has a little color
to it. But don’t start with a dark wood like walnut and try to lighten it.
You can always darken the color of lighter woods, but it’s hard to go the
other way.
You can also consider clear finishes rather than stains on cherry, walnut,
and other woods rich in color, such as butternut, mahogany, rosewood, and teak.
A stain shouldn’t be confused with a finish. A finishing coat is applied over
the stain to protect it. Typically, a stain will be coated with a
catalytic-conversion varnish to give it durability and sheen—whether matte or
high-gloss or anything in-between. When it’s baked on, the varnish catalyzes
into a hard, protective finish. You don’t want to top the stain with oil,
lacquer, or wax because those substances won’t hold up and will yellow over
time. Glazes can be used as an overcoat to achieve certain effects, such as
an antique look.
Wood
veneer
Wood veneer
is made from peeling strips of wood off a tree like you pull paper towels off
a roll. As a result, it’s much thinner than solid wood and is typically
applied to plywood or particleboard to give it strength. It has two main
advantages over solid wood: It can cost less and its grain can be more
consistent.
You can stain wood veneer to match a solid wood door and use it on the side
panels. Make sure both the veneer and the door are made from the same wood
species.
Wood veneer also makes an attractive option for cabinet interiors visible
through glass doors.
Paint
With paint
you certainly have an endless palette of colors to choose from. You can also
achieve a range of special effects. Paint can look smooth and glossy or it
can be sanded, rubbed off, or dented with rocks to look distressed. But you
should be aware up front that hairline cracks will appear at the joints of
solid wood doors as the wood expands and contracts. You can avoid cracking if
you apply paint to MDF, a solid material that doesn’t move with humidity
changes.
Polyester
It isn’t that
big of a leap to cabinets from cars, on which this finish has been commonly
applied. The same durability and quality needed on the road is also appreciated
in the kitchen. There, polyester can be found on appliances as well as
modern-style cabinets, in a glossy or matte finish. It fills the pores of the
door more fully than paint, giving it a solid look and feel.
The technique might involve more than 20 steps of sanding and finishing.
There’s even a step where a special topcoat is applied in a dust-free (!)
room. The finish goes through numerous oven curings and hand sandings with
extremely fine abrasives. Special glazes and polishes applied at the end help
achieve the final, mirror-like sheen.
Perhaps not surprisingly, all that elbow grease makes this one of the more
expensive finish choices.
Plastic
laminate
Plastic
laminate comes in all kinds of colors, patterns, and textures. It’s durable,
stain-resistant, and easy to clean. But it can be hard to repair if it chips
because it’s made of layers—sheets of kraft paper (like that used in grocery
bags), a decorative paper, and a plastic coating. The layers are all pressed
together under high heat.
The kraft paper leaves a brown edge that can be covered and dressed up with a
stainless steel, brass, or wood trim. Solid-color laminate offers a slightly
more expensive alternative that uses plastic sheets of the same color
throughout so that no dark edges show.
Stainless
steel
Stainless
steel can be found on just about every design element in the kitchen these
days. On cabinets, it’s typically formed around an inner core material to
give it substance and keep it from sounding tinny. While you can get a very
sleek look from stainless steel, it shows fingerprints and scratches.
Glass
Glass
presents yet another option for the look of the cabinet door. Mixing glass in
with other door fronts in the kitchen can add interest to any design,
particularly to stock cabinets that might otherwise lack unique touches. Some
glasses are ribbed or etched so that the colors—not the messy details—of the
dishes or cereal boxes sitting behind them show through. The ribbing may be
vertical, horizontal, or diagonal. Other glass doors may be clear or colored
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