How To Upgrade Your Kitchen Cabinet Design Without Breaking The Bank



Posted: Friday, September 18, 2009

by Anne Sinclair
The Grim Creeper

The type of kitchen cabinets you choose for your kitchen can add both beauty and style depending on the quality of the cabinets you use. Of course, adding new cabinets can be very expensive, but there is an alternative. You can easily and cost-effectively change the doors on your cabinets to give your kitchen an entirely new look.

To start with, it's important that you have a good, efficient cabinet design that will maximize the storage space in your kitchen. When you're planning your renovated kitchen, you need to establish some goals as to what you want to incorporate into your finished space.

Kitchen cabinets come in a variety of different woods. These woods can include pine, maple, oak, cherry, birch, alder, and poplar. The woods that make the best cabinets are cherry, maple, and birch; however, if you need to opt for less expensive woods, you can cover alder and poplar with a hard-glazed finish which will give your kitchen a more antique look. If you want cabinets that are going to be durable enough for use in a family kitchen, stick with hickory and oak, because both of these woods will wear well. If you have small children, you definitely will not want to select pine cabinets as pine is a soft wood and will dent and scratch more easily.

There are three different styles of doors being made today for kitchen cabinets: raised panel, recessed panel, or slab. In addition, there are many cabinet designs you can choose from. Most kitchens today have traditional, contemporary, country, or Shaker style cabinets.

Most kitchen cabinets are built with a combination of woods in order to keep costs down. A lot of them include particleboard or plywood as part of their construction.

Solid hardwood kitchen cabinets are available, but they're going to have a hefty price tag. The first choice amongst cabinet-buyers is usually those built using a combination of solid wood and plywood. In most cases, plywood is both thicker and more durable than particleboard; however, particleboard will have less expansion.

Before you go out to choose a kitchen cabinet design, decide exactly the type of look you want to achieve. Do you want a traditional kitchen with raised-panel doors and a lot of fancy moldings, or would you rather go rustic using knotty-pine and basic hardware? Do a little research to see what types of cabinets are available and to decide which style will look best in the type of kitchen you're hoping to design. Keep your budget in mind while choosing cabinets, too.

For new kitchen cabinet designs and ideas, visit DiscoverKitchenCabinets.com for tips on painting, refacing and refinishing kitchen cabinets.

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