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Cabinet Door Finishing

12/17/15       
Jason Balm Member

Here is a question I have had rolling around in my head for years... It is starting to eat at me as I move closer to adding a larger booth at my shop with the intention of finishing more of our cabinetry.

When finishing a cabinet door (5 piece - stained or painted) how do you get the center panel to look as if it was finished first and then assembled leaving a nice looking clean joint at the style and rails??

I wish I had a picture depicting this, but I am hoping that someone on here knows what I am talking about.

It is less of an issue on stained products, but on painted products it sure would be nice to have the ability to create that crisp joint.

12/18/15       #3: Cabinet Door Finishing ...
JM

Your groove for the panel needs a little back cut or radius where the frame meets the panel, then be very diligent about blowing all the sanding dust from the joint.

12/18/15       #4: Cabinet Door Finishing ...
Pete D

Freeborn will produce any of their cutters with an 'eased edge'. You could also talk to a grinding service about easing the edges of your existing cutters although I don't know if that's always an option. I've got a freeborn set w/o the eased edge and was told I could send them back and they'd regrind the existing cutters.

12/18/15       #5: Cabinet Door Finishing ...
tim Member

I think the difficulty lies with the stiles and rails and not the panel per se as that is where any excess finish will 'hang' and tend to roll into the gap.

Do you mean when spraying?
You just said 'finishing'.

Sorry, I don't have an answer.

Not sure what an eased edge has to do with your question. If eased, then that easing would carry through to where the stile and rail join. I guess that's a 'look'.

12/18/15       #7: Cabinet Door Finishing ...
JeffA

So design a door that is assembled after finish. Make a door that has an open frame in the back so you can attach the panel securely after finish.

12/18/15       #8: Cabinet Door Finishing ...
Jason Balm Member

Thank you for the responses. I generally outsource my doors, but I could request an eased joint. I also use a number of one peice mdf doors so this ends up not mattering at all.

I've noticed this "clean" joint mostly on doors from large cabinet manufacturers. It does appear that the panel is finished first, but the frame is not modified at all.. Just a normal cope and stick or mitered frame. That clean joint looks so nice that I wanted to find a way to replicate it.

Basically wondering if I was missing a magical finishing trick I've never heard of.

Again, thank you for the responses.

12/18/15       #9: Cabinet Door Finishing ...
Mastercabman

Just spray the doors normally
The lacquer/CV won't build in the groove
You will get a nice clean joint
Doors are usually finished after put together

12/18/15       #10: Cabinet Door Finishing ...
Hen Bob Member

I 2nd Mastercabman,

You defiantly need to be spraying the stain to apply it.. Then wipe and proceed as normal

12/20/15       #11: Cabinet Door Finishing ...
Thom

It's all in the wrist. When I spray doors, I deliberately aim and concentrate the material to the recesses in order to coat evenly. There's also blow-back to consider if the air pressure is too high.


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