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Part
I - Ordering Your New Doors and Drawer Fronts
In this article, we'll show
you how to completely update your kitchen by refacing your
existing cabinets with pressure sensitive veneer (or other
self adhesive material), and replacing your cabinet doors
and door fronts, using our hassle-free
Custom Door and Drawer Front Program. But
before you begin, you'll need to gather some
information about your kitchen, and make a few decisions
about the best way to proceed. This step is very important -
omitting it could mean serious difficulties down the line.
Here's what
to check:
1. The type
of door your current cabinets have.
In almost all cases, the
cabinet doors in your kitchen will be one of three types:
-
Overlay
- Full
inset
-
Partial inset

Overlay Doors - The cabinet door is larger
than the opening of the cabinet and is mounted over the
front of the cabinet opening.
Full
Inset Doors - The cabinet
door is inset into the cabinet opening, so that the cabinet
door and front edge of the cabinet are flush (on the
same plane).
Partial Inset
Doors - the door has a
rabbet, (or notch) cut into the outside edge of the door so
that the door is partially inset into the cabinet opening.
2. Decide
which type of door You will use for replacement.
Before you can order your new
doors, you'll have to decide which type of door and drawer
front you'd like to use for replacement. Here you have a
couple of options. The most simple - in terms of measuring
and ordering the doors you need - is to order the same type
of door as you currently have. If your current doors are
either overlay or full
inset doors, you can simply measure your
existing doors and your are ready to order.
You do not necessarily have
to replace your cabinet doors with the same type of
door. You may want to replace full inset doors with overlay
doors. There are good reasons for doing so - overlay doors
are often easier to install than inset doors. If you
choose this option, remember that you will almost certainly
need to buy new hinges to go with your new cabinet doors -
the hinges used with inset doors are rarely compatible with
overlay doors and vice versa. Also, be sure that you will
have enough clearance between your cabinet door openings to
allow the doors to open and close properly. Check the
specifications of the overlay
door hinges you select to determine the correct size of
door to order.
Partial inset doors have
become less and less common over that past few decades, and
are rarely found on contemporary cabinets. The custom door
and drawer program does not offer a partial inset door edge.
If your cabinets currently have partial inset doors, you
will need to either replace them with another type of door,
or be prepared to cut the door lip yourself (a process that
we can only recommend for woodworkers of intermediate
skill). Fortunately, partial inset doors can usually be
easily replaced with overlay doors. As with changing
from full inset to overlay doors, we recommend carefully
checking the clearance between the cabinet openings and the
specifications of the overlay door hinges you choose.
3. Choose new
hinges
Unless you are planning to
reuse your current cabinet hinges, you'll need to pick out
new hinges. You have many options. Take a minute to read
through Rockler's article, Understanding
Hinges before you order your doors, where you'll find
help in picking out your cabinet hinges. Remember that the
hinges you select may influence the size of door you will
need to order.
Three sided drawer box
-the drawer sides, back and bottom attach directly
to the drawer front.
Four
sided drawer box -the
drawer box has four complete sides. The drawer front
attaches to the front side of the drawer box.
4. Determine
the type of your existing drawers
The drawers in your kitchen will be one of two types: they
will have a three sided drawer box or a four sided drawer
box.
Remember that if you change
the type of cabinet door - from inset to overlay, for
example - you will want to change the type of drawer front
to match. Again, be sure that you will have enough clearance
around the edges of the drawer front for the drawers to
operate properly.
Special
Instructions for Three Sided Drawer Boxes
On page five, we'll show you how to attach your new drawer
fronts to three and four sided drawer boxes. For now, you
just need to check to make sure that you will have enough
drawer clearance inside of your cabinet
If your current drawer
boxes are three sided, you will be using the current front
of the drawer as the back side of the drawer box, and will
need to add the current drawer front's thickness to the
overall length of the drawer (see Installing Drawer the
Drawer Fronts on page 5 for more information). Measure the
entire length of the drawer (including the width of the
drawer front) and check to see that you will have enough
room inside of the cabinet drawer opening for the length of
the new drawer/drawer front.
Ordering your
doors
If you've determined the type of doors and drawer fronts to
order, the dimensions of the doors and drawer fronts,
selected new hinges (if necessary) and confirmed that the
hinges will work with the door type and dimensions that you
have in mind, then you're ready to head to Rockler's
Custom Door and Drawer Front page, where you'll be able
to specify the style, number and dimensions of the doors in
your order.
Next Up...
Next, on page 2, we'll walk through the steps that will make
refacing your existing cabinets a smooth and easy process.
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