Useful Kitchen Unit Doors
Saturday, July 17th, 2010When you are ready to make an update to the home and the kitchen needs a face-lift, an inexpensive way to increase the value of your house and the function of the space is to install kitchen unit doors, also known as cabinet doors. The kitchen cupboards are often the one space that is hardest to fill well. People have problems making them big enough to hold every kitchen utensil and compact enough to leave space open for working and cooking. However, well planned kitchen units that have the right balance are a coveted novelty.
Selecting the right material for kitchen doors is a matter of preference. Solid, hardwood is the most valuable material whether you use pine, oak or ash but other materials are equally as functional and much cheaper. In fact, a popular trend in interior design is the use of plywood. Plywood is an inexpensive building material that can be coated with a thin sheet of any wood style. By choosing plywood, you can install cherry cabinet doors inexpensively while still enjoying the rich look that they bring to any room. While plywood may be snubbed by some, it is actually a great material for most projects.
Because of the way plywood is built, it is completely resistant to warping. Each ply consists of a thin wood grain running in one direction. The plies surrounding it run at a ninety-degree angle to it. That means as it gets wet, dries out or endures humidity each individual ply swells in an opposite direction pulling on the plies above and below it. With tension in every direction, the wood holds its form instead of becoming bowed. This quality makes it perfect for climates where the weather is often changing. However, if you are set on solid wood, it is best to think about the features and cost.
For solid wood, pine is among the best options. Its soft malleable characteristics are excellent for kitchen doors. It can be scratched and dinged and easily repaired. Pine is also a wonderful wood for taking stain. It has an absorptive surface and shows its grain well after being treated. Other woods like oak will be more expensive. Ash is popular for kitchen cupboards and Cherry is three times as costly as them all. Therefore, as you will see, shopping for new cabinets and doors is all a matter of taste and budget.