10:39 PM white kitchen cabinets | ||||
White Kitchen Cabinets: Boring or Contemporary? David Papazian/Photographer's Choice RF/Getty Images Updated December 24, 2014. White cabinets are true full-spectrum kitchen improvements: they can help your kitchen achieve either a look of cool modernity or of boring cheapness. Between all this, white cabinets:
If thermofoil was invented for anything, it apparently was invented for the sheer purpose of creating white kitchen cabinetry. Thermofoil is a very thin melamine coating that is adhered onto the fiberboard core material of kitchen cabinets. Thermofoil serves two purposes:
Be forewarned, though, because when thermofoil chips, it’s chipped —and for good. You cant paint it, you can’t patch it very well. So the main thing you can do is try to avoid ever chipping or scratching thermofoil. On the plus side, white kitchen cabinets that are coated in thermofoil are abundantly available and extremely cheap. While thermofoil is often mentioned as the epitome of dull and boring, I think it all about how you choose to interpret it. If you introduce thermofoil to your kitchen just to save money--and the thermofoil look has nothing in common with the rest of the kitchen--then you are verging towards the cheap-and-dull end of the spectrum. But if the thermofoil is incorporated in a kitchen that honestly aims for other contemporary aspects--sleek appliances, stainless steel hoods, swanky primary-color countertops--then it can be not only non-offensive but stylistically effective. Refacing is another popular way to turn existing kitchen cabinets into those highly-desired white kitchen cabinets. A refacing company comes into your home (sorry, no DIY on this one), removes the doors and fixtures, faces them with a thin veneer, and then faces the exposed parts of the cabinet “boxes” with veneer, too. Note: it the rare homeowner who chooses thermofoil for refacing, most opting for luxe-looking hardwood veneers. This is the rare chance for homeowners to get the look of hardwood without its skyrocket-high price. While refacing is not as cheap as those junk-mail ad circulars might have you believe, it is vastly cheaper than new cabinets. If your kitchen cabinets are a real wood surface (not melamine), they will take paint. The only question is whether you can condition the wood to sufficiently take the paint. Kitchen cabinets near the stove area are notorious for having layers of kitchen grease that is nearly impossible to wipe down. Sanding and/or chemical solvents will be needed to prepare the wood. The good news is that clean areas probably will need little more than a light sanding to roughen up the wood for your initial primer coat. share on facebook pin to pinterest
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