Bead Board Panel Cabinet Door - Georgia
Suggested Drawer Front Options
Slab Drawer Front
Shown In Alder
Delaware Drawer Front
Shown In Cherry
Georgia Door
Shown in Maple
Minimum Door Width: 5 1/2”
Minimum Door Length: 5 1/2”
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Shown here is our Bead Board Panel custom cabinet door.
Red Oak wood is a straight grained with a coarse texture and prominent rays. Light
reddish tan heartwood and narrow, almost white sapwood. Red Oak is a very hard and
durable hardwood with great wear resistance. Read Oak is commonly used for cabinets,
furniture, millwork, musical instruments, plywood, flooring, turnery, boxes, caskets,
pallets, heavy construction, and many other applications. Oak accepts stain very
well, from light to dark. Due to its rather coarse grain patterns Red Oak is not
recommended for painting as this coarse grain will show under some painted finishes.
Of course if this is the look you desire for your painted finishes then Red Oak may
be an excellent choice.
All of our Bead Board Panel doors are 5 piece doors. This style of door has a flat
center panel with Beaded grooves cut into the panel. Bead Board spacing is default
1 1/2” on center, a 2” on center spacing is also available. These 5 piece cabinet
doors are sometimes called frame and panel doors. Meaning that the panel is held
in place by the door frame. This is the most traditional way to build these type
of cabinet doors. This allows the Bead Board panel to move with changes in temperature
and humidity making for a very stable door. For our solid wood stain grade Bead Board
panel cabinet doors, all of the wood is hand selected for color and uniformity.
Our inset panel cabinet doors are available in paint grade, solid wood, or economical
MDF panels and can have either square or edge detailing, such as a round over or
finger pull edge detail. Visit our door profiles page for the various options.
Red Oak Quarter Sawn wood is a straight grained with a coarse texture Light reddish
tan heartwood and narrow, almost white sapwood. Red Oak is a very hard and durable
hardwood with great wear resistance. Oak accepts stain very well, from light to dark.
Quarter Sawn material is milled so that the growth rings of the lumber are near vertical
(60 to 90 degrees), the cuts made cuts across the wood's ray cells yielding "ray-flecked"
grain.