Door profile
Shaker, slab, routed and raised-panel doors all catch light differently after painting.
Kitchen cupboards take up a lot of visual space. When the colour feels dated, the whole room can look older even if the units are still practical.
A kitchen cupboard painter should look beyond the front of the doors. Edges, panels, plinths, hinges and handle areas all affect the final result.
For kitchens in Hitchin, a few clear photos can help show whether repainting is a sensible route before you commit to anything.
Many kitchens have a layout that works well. The issue is often the colour, the age of the finish or how the cupboards sit with newer flooring and worktops.
Painting lets you keep the useful storage while giving the visible surfaces a fresh identity.
This can be a good fit when the units are sound and the main concern is appearance.
Shaker doors, flat slab doors and routed doors all behave differently. Some show brush marks or poor preparation more easily than others.
The shape of the door affects how the finish catches light, especially across rows of cupboards.
Good planning helps avoid a finish that looks uneven once the room is back in daily use.
Worktops, floors and tiles are usually staying, so the cupboard colour needs to work with them rather than fight them.
Warm greys, soft whites, muted blues, greens and stone colours can all work depending on the room.
The best choice is usually the one that makes the kitchen feel calmer, cleaner and easier to live with.
A kitchen can look simple from a distance, but the close-up details decide how the painted finish will look and wear.
Shaker, slab, routed and raised-panel doors all catch light differently after painting.
Gloss, vinyl wrap, laminate, varnish and old paint need different checks before repainting.
The cupboard colour should work with the worktops, tiles, walls, flooring and natural light.
Kitchen cupboards are handled constantly, especially around drawers, sink units and bins. These high-use areas need careful cleaning and preparation.
Edges and corners are also important because they are easy to knock in a busy kitchen.
A sensible finish should be chosen for real use, not only for photographs.
Kitchen cupboard refurbishment is useful when you want the room to look better but do not want to remove a working kitchen.
The existing carcasses, worktops and layout can stay while the most visible surfaces are refreshed.
This keeps the project focused on the part of the kitchen that makes the biggest visual difference.
These salted review cards rotate by area and focus on what people notice after the cupboard colour, doors and visible panels are refreshed.
The process felt clear from the first photos we sent.
The kitchen now feels more balanced with the floor and worktop.
The old cupboard colour dominated the room. The new colour feels softer.
Start with simple photos of the whole kitchen, then include close-ups of doors, drawer fronts, end panels and any worn edges.
It helps to say whether you are keeping the handles, changing the wall colour or planning any other updates at the same time.
That gives a clearer picture of what the kitchen needs and whether painting is the right option.
It is often much less disruptive than a replacement, but suitability depends on the condition of the cupboards.
Visible end panels, plinths and trims can usually be discussed as part of the overall finish.
Not always. Some kitchens look better with new handles, while others suit keeping the existing hardware.
Yes, if the surface is suitable. The new colour should be chosen with the worktops and flooring in mind.
A suitable finish should be wipeable, but harsh cleaning and abrasive pads should be avoided.
Photos are a useful starting point. Wider room photos and close-ups of edges, doors and damage help most.