Home Stores & Shopping Buy Kitchen Cabinets Glossary of Terms of cabinets
Featured Links:
Kitchen_Design_e-Book
Designing Successful Kitchens
DeClutter Fast
Get Your Home In Order!
Create electricity at home
Make a windmill and solar power system.


Top Brands!...Low Prices!!!

Glossary of Terms of cabinets

If you’re looking for definitions to many of the cabinet terms used here, chances are you’ll find it among our Glossary of Terms

Mortise? Tenon? Laminate? Here's what it all means:

Manufacturing Terminology

Checking: Separation in wood or shallow crack in paint, varnish, or lacquer; usually happens to exposed, unprotected lumber that is subjected to severe conditions of moisture or dryness.

Grain: Natural pattern of growth in wood; the grain runs lengthwise of the trees, therefore, the strength is the greatest in that direction.

Hardwood: Wood of broad-leaved trees; oak, maple, ash, walnut, poplar; contrasted to the soft wood of the needle-leaved trees: pine, fir, spruce, hemlock.

Heartwood: Older, harder non-living central portion of the tree, denser, and more durable than surrounding sapwood.

Knotholes: Voids produced where knots have dropped out of veneer or lumber.

Laminate: To bind together a series of layers of wood, plastic, or other material; as a noun, a piece made of layers of wood, plastic, or other material, bonded together by gluing or other process.

Mineral Streaks: Olive, black or brown discoloration of wood, caused by oxidation and other chemical changes.

Mullion: Vertical division of a double width window; the intermediate vertical frame member of a two or three door cabinet.

Overlay: Date on which MRP says is needed in order to meet other requirements.

Reveal: Side of an opening between the frame and the outer surface, or frame visible around a door or overlay.

Sapwood: Living wood of pale color just beneath the bark, sapwood is usually more susceptible to decay than heartwood.

Arch: Door style with an arched top on the wall cabinet doors.

Bead board: Distinctive grooved surfaces of beaded panels recreate the look and feel of ?Cottage? style architecture.

Cathedral: Door style with a uniquely curved top on the wall cabinet doors.

Drawer Bottom: The inside bottom piece of cabinet drawers.

Drawer Front: The wood or thermofoil face of the drawer that coordinates with the door style.

Drawer Guides: The hardware installed on drawers that supports the gliding motion of the drawer. The specific drawer guide used varies depending the drawer construction selected.

End Panel: The wood panel on the outside (left or right side) of a base cabinet.

Filler: A piece used to fill any gaps in cabinetry design that is not filled by cabinets to make the design fit the room precisely.

Glaze: An artistic application of an accent color to enhance the detail of a cabinet door style.

Mitered: A joint made by cutting the frame of a cabinet door at an angle and fitting the pieces together.

Modified full overlay: Doors are sized to almost touch, reducing the appearance of the front frame, while adding a mounting surface to the top of every cabinet for trim.

 
 
Google