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18th February 2008, 12:11 AM #1Novice
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- Feb 2008
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- Outer Eastern Suburbs, Melb.
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Cupboard Doors - Please help me track these down!! **PICS**
Hi everyone,
I'm really REALLY hoping someone might be able to help me out here. Below are several photos of our current kitchen cabinet doors. I'm trying to track down the supplier of these, as I need to get some more.
My wife and I recently bought a 'renovators delight' - and the kitchen is very incomplete. We're using some of the existing cabinets, and also adding some new ones (in particular 2 corner base units that I bought in flat-pack form and assembled myself).
Our budget has allowed for a new benchtop, but not the doors, so now the hunt is on to track these down!!! I'd love the find the same style, colour, finish etc... The current ones are in decent enough nick for now, so that's why we're going to try and finish the set. There's plenty of spare end panel material in the garage too.
Any help, advice, or contacts would be GREATLY appreciated. I will let the pics do the rest of the talking....
Cheers,
Brett.
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18th February 2008, 08:30 AM #2
they are lime washed tasmainian oak ,i suggest you take one off and go to a joinery shop ,they can repoduce the arch and profile for a small setting up fee ,then your hunt is to find a french polished to copy the wash
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18th February 2008, 11:28 AM #3Novice
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- Feb 2008
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- Outer Eastern Suburbs, Melb.
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Thanks for that info arms, it's excellent to know.
I'm still crossing my fingers someone might be able to put me onto the original supplier... but if not, I'll have to go down that path.
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18th February 2008, 12:55 PM #4
These are fairly generic solid timber joinery doors, so it'll be tricky for anyone to identify the original supplier - except perhaps the kitchen cabinet maker or retailer you got it from. And sometimes the door maker just makes the bare timber doors and your kitchen cabinet maker then does the limed finish & varnish.
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18th February 2008, 01:12 PM #5Novice
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- Feb 2008
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- Outer Eastern Suburbs, Melb.
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Hey guys, just another thought... if this proves too tricky to match up... would it be easy enough for me to strip down these ones back to bare timber - and then get some matching ones made (also bare), and then just choose a finish and do the whole lot at once... even if they are just painted?
I wonder how a belt sander would go on them? Obviously, there would need to be some hand sanding involved too....
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18th February 2008, 05:27 PM #6
Stripping the lime wash could be a bit of a task. I think the doors are pretty generic. My parents have that design, but I don't think they are finished with them yet. Maybe "ye olde Bunnings" might even have them.
Failing matching the doors, maybe you could get plain flat doors. It looks like the segment under the stove is flat. You could make a feature of a necessity and paint them white or completely different colour.Last edited by tea lady; 18th February 2008 at 05:31 PM. Reason: Another thought.
anne-maria.
Tea Lady
(White with none)
Follow my little workshop/gallery on facebook. things of clay and wood.
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18th February 2008, 05:54 PM #7
I actually think that is just a blank cupboard side intended to be hidden by a bank of cupboards returning along the wall.
The timber could also be called "Limed Vic Ash" as well as Tassie Oak.
It looks to me like the kitchen you have was a pullout from some other job that was never properly installed when it was moved into your house. There are no kick boards. You might be able to find a suitable match at all sorts of places, but matching the lime wash exactly can be difficult. There are at least two methods out there, one is to stain the timber with a wash like any other stain and then clear coat over it. My experience with that system is the polyurethane top coat can yellow and getting an exact match is then difficult. Another option is an all in one finish like Cabot's "White Pine" which seemed quite acceptable to me and didn't yellow as much.
You might be able to find odd cabinets or reasonable matches for sale at auctions like http://www.graysonline.com.au/sale.asp?SALE_ID=2436
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18th February 2008, 06:47 PM #8
its not the supplier thats the problem but copying the mouldings that makes the door the design that it is
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18th February 2008, 08:00 PM #9
Personally I'd be more worried about all of those gables going down to floor level - looks to me like they have already taken some wear.
I would be more inclined to chase up a set of colourboard doors - as some have suggested possibly in a contrasting finish rather that lashing out serious readies on a project that might not really be worth it.
Cheers,
Earl
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18th February 2008, 11:30 PM #10Novice
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- Feb 2008
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- Outer Eastern Suburbs, Melb.
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Thanks for all the latest comments and suggestions.
Fuzzie has hit the nail on the head - we believe this kitchen was a pull-out from another house, and was never installed correctly (it never even looked like fitting). It was totally incomplete, and no allowance for the corners (hence why I have since gone and bought 2 corner base units myself - which will take bi-fold doors).
I am only using some of the cabinets seen in the photos - and since those pics were taken, I've gutted the kitchen, re-wired, re-plumbed, plastered and painted. It looks fantastic now, so I'm getting more and more turned off from these current doors. They will certainly be the weakest link in the kitchen. I will still consider all my options, but yeah I'm in two minds over it all!!!
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19th February 2008, 10:52 AM #11
Try this Mob - I'm sure that they will have that profile.
Fenton Timbers
Fax 03 6339 4399.
They're in Tassie but they send stuff up all the time and have good prices.
Ask to speak to Bruce.
BTW I did a similar thing had some Tassie oak doors that looked very tired. I restored those and bought additional ones that you couldn't tell the difference.
Attachment 67543
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19th February 2008, 11:28 AM #12
Incidentally, these are solid timber joinery doors, and would last years and years, so don't even think of getting rid of them. Much better than most of the chipboard or mdf doors that come with kitchens.
Can't tell without a close up look, but it's possible that they may even be Ash (not Victorian Ash but the European stuff). I had a joinery door make a fair bit for me sometime back, overseas. What you did then was tell them the door dimensions and the profile of the door pattern ie. whether straight or curved or mixed. In your case, most of the doors would then be curved at the top and straight at the bottom. They came bare, and you'd have to sand and apply whatever finish you wanted. Really solid stuff.
I'd avoid removing the limed finish. Would not be that hard to find the finishes needed to get the limed finish, although colour matching (esp. as it may have darkened through age) may be difficult.
Just to add more info. Cheers.
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20th February 2008, 04:31 PM #13Novice
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- Feb 2008
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- Outer Eastern Suburbs, Melb.
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That's a good point Ashwood - if I can, I'd rather keep solid timber doors that will last ages, rather than replace them with cheaper mdf / chipboard doors.
I have a possible lead at the moment - a bloke at work saw my photos and reckons he has the identical doors in his kitchen. The company he used are still operating (in Dandenong) which is not to far from me, so I'll be taking a door or two down there and having a good chat with them. Have already spoken over the phone, and he said it certainly sounds like something they offer. He is keen to identify my doors and see what options we have. Fingers crossed.
Thanks also for your help Bleedin Thumb. I'll keep that Tassie mob in mind too if this goes no where!
- Brett.
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21st February 2008, 09:13 AM #14Novice
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- Aug 2005
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- melbourne
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- 9
The doors are just routered out, as there are no joins in the corners of the mouldings. Therefore if you can make up the blank doors you just need to go to somebody with a cnc router to do the pattern. Or one of the door manufacturers like Bardicorp in Dandenong etc. as they have similar looking profiles in there brochure.
Otherwise I know of a couple of CNC router places in Ferntree Gully, Knox area.
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21st February 2008, 09:30 AM #15
Nope, sorry you can clearly see the rail and stile joint in each corner and the change in grain direction - horizontal for the rails and vertical for the stiles. You can also clearly see different coloured boards which have been joined to make the floating panels, these colours don't carry into the rails.
Mick"If you need a machine today and don't buy it,
tomorrow you will have paid for it and not have it."
- Henry Ford 1938
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