| User's Guide For New Cabinetry |
|
| Written by Administrator |
| Saturday, 06 September 2008 03:07 |
IntroductionNow that your kitchen cabinets have been installed, this guide will tell you how to take care of them, how to handle repairs over time and how to add options and additions. Getting StartedOnce your kitchen cabinets are installed, the temptation is to immediately begin putting things in the drawers and cabinets. After all, you've been waiting for this moment a long time. However, before starting to put things away, we suggest you do the following:
What To Use On Your CabinetsLike any fine-quality surface, your cabinetry should be treated carefully and cleaned and maintained with quality materials.
What To Expect From Your CabinetsWood is a natural material. As such, seasonal growth patterns and weather conditions contribute to the uniqueness of the grain and color in each piece of board cut from a tree. These conditions also add the swirls, burls, mineral streaking, fine pinholes, pitch pockets and color streaks that you find in the wood of all fine cabinetry and furniture. Later, as the wood is cut, sanded and rubbed with a finish, all of these features combine to give your cabinets special character and a deep, rich patina. Because temperature, seasonal growth patterns and weather conditions are not the same in all parts of the country, different types of trees produce wood with different features. Black CherryOur cherry wood comes from the moderate climate of Pennsylvania and West Virginia. Its grain is straight, close, finely textured and gently weaving. Within the wood are wonderful variations in color, ranging from pink, to green, to yellow and brown. There can be mineral streaks, fine pinholes, grain swirls and occasional pitch pockets. The best part of the tree for making furniture is the heartwood, but even after it has been made into cabinetry, cherry heartwood continues to change and darken as UV light interacts with the oxygen in the wood, giving your cabinetry an ever improving patina. Sugar MapleThe maple wood that we use comes from the colder climate of upper Michigan and Canada. Even though it is quick growing, maple's grain is straight, fine- textured and strong, making it as heavy and durable as red oak. Within the grain are variations in color ranging from light to dark reddish brown as well as mineral streaks, swirls and pitch flecks. Over the years, the interaction of sunshine with the oxygen in the wood will give your cabinetry a soft golden glow. Northern Red OakWe get our oak wood from the colder climates of Minnesota and Wisconsin where the trees grow tall and straight and often over one hundred feet high. Oak's grain is quite dominant and varies from straight lines to arched or pointed patterns. Colors range from pink to green as well as from light to dark. Like so many other woods, the color and patina of oak cabinetry deepens as the wood interacts with natural light. HickoryA strong and durable wood with tight grain, our hickory comes from New York and Kentucky. Its grain pattern is wavy and contains dramatic color variations ranging from white to reddish brown. Sometimes the wood can be described as having a zebra or bleached and brown effect because of the striking variations even within the same piece of wood. Hickory is not for the timid. It is for those who like how interesting grain patterns that can bring a room to life. NoteThe cabinet you have selected has its own personality and character, as well as a richness and depth in its color and grain. You will be more likely to notice the variations in the grain and color of your cabinetry if you have selected a natural or light finish. If you chose a darker finish choice, those variations will probably be less apparent. Your cabinet has been constructed from carefully selected quality hardwoods. Because imperfections are part of the natural beauty of hardwood, and not the result of the manufacturing of your cabinets, your warranty cannot cover differences in color, grain and natural variations. Nor can it cover possible differences in color when adding new cabinetry to old. We encourage you to enjoy the natural beauty of solid wood and appreciate those characteristics that give it personality Minor RepairsFrom time to time you may encounter some unavoidable situations that create minor problems with your cabinetry. Before calling your dealer/installer for help, consider the following:
|