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Thread: Euro Style Cabinets vs. Face Frame?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
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    Athens, AL
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    123

    Euro Style Cabinets vs. Face Frame?

    I am considering undertaking a home remodeling job (mine) where I'll be constructing some cabinets for my kitchen. I'm just wondering if anyone has any thoughts or comparisons between face frame construction and the euro-style cabinets?

    I am also weighing a make vs. buy decision on the cabinets...

    Any and all advice is appreciated!

    Thanks!
    Athens, AL

  2. #2
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Arkansas
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    556
    Having done both, frameless is the way to go. Much easier, no fiddling around with attaching frames. A cleaner look, and much wider set of hardware options.

    If you have never done frameless, check out the KISS 32mm system.

    http://www.cabsystems.com/KISSII/KIIrivDe-mail.pdf

    Buy versus make. If you can find exactly what you want and the quality you want then buy. But, given this is a woodworkers forum, we all know the answer to the above.

    Steve

  3. #3
    Hi Jeff, I build Face Frame cabinets for 1/2 of my living. I am seriously considering a switch to frameless. The reason? You can build frameless cabinets twice as fast as framed. There is a ton of work in building and finishing and installing a simple face frame.

    I cant say one is better than the other. A frame will help keep the box square and from racking, but so will a 3/4 back on a framless cabinet. Once its screwed to the wall, its not going to rack anyway.

    Im not sure what tools you have, but frameless requires very accurate cuts for everything to line up right. Also need a decent way to edgeband.

    I used to think that frameless meant cheap, and most of the frameless at the Borgs are. Look at some of the custom cabinet makers out there producing some of the most beautiful cabinets that are frameless.

  4. #4
    There's no accounting for taste, but I think the euro style is kind of ugly. Maybe I haven't seen it done right, but the whole effect screams "IKEA" to me even when it's not IKEA. Maybe it's the fact that I know there's a bunch of termite poop under all that 0.003" veneer (assuming it's not melamine).

    From a practical standpoint, the 32mm euro hinges bug me too--they intrude into the cabinets' openings and are far larger than necessary to support typical kitchen doors. I like the look and function of traditional applied hinges better. Yes, they are a pain to install. But the 60 year old solid pine face frame cabinets in my mother's house are still serviceable after all these years so the carpenters who built them did it right once and for all.

    Or maybe I'm just annoyed at the hybrid euro/face frame garbage in my kitchen. The previous owner gushed about the fine Thomasville cabinets, but I'd much rather have had the original solid wood stuff with 14 layers of paint than a bunch of cherry sticks nailed to 3/8" (I'm serious) particle board.

    But to address the OP's question: while tastes vary, I'm sure you can get good results with quality materials and good workmanship no matter which way you go. Skip the melamine and go for hardwood plywood, for instance. Sure, the materials cost will be 5X higher, but the real cost of a job like this is in the labor anyway--why not do it right?

    Just IMHO, of course.

  5. #5
    Join Date
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    It is funny looking at the responses saying face frames are more work. I have built face frame cabinets and am now building an entertainment which could be considered frameless. Teh frameless is much more a pain in the a$$ for me. It takes 2x as long and you have to be very accurate. I built a whole bedroom worth of furnature with face frames in the same amount of time it is taking me to build this small entertainment center.

  6. #6
    The first question you need to ask yourself is if you prefer apples or oranges. There is no doubt that frameless cabinets can be easier to build and if you have the "right" equipment they can be vastly easier and faster to build. If you don't have the "right equipment" (a good panel cutting system is almost prerequisite as is a way to handle the application of edge banding and to deal with the line and construction boring typical of 32MM construction), you might even find that it is much more of a PITA to construct frameless cabinets. But frameless cabinets also have a certain "look" that results from having the doors and drawer faces very close together. You can vary the door design, put pilasters or moldings in between cabinet sections, add crowns (with their required backings since there are no face frames to attach them to) footed bases, etc. But they still will have "that look". Some designs simply lend themselves better to casework that has a face frame. I would ask myself if the intended design would be compromised by the lack (or inclusion) of a face frame and base my decision on that.
    David DeCristoforo

  7. #7
    Join Date
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    This is a personal preference decision. While frameless can be somewhat simpler and faster to build, for many of us, the "look" of face frames and inset doors is what we want. My adaptation is to build my boxes to match the face frame openings to the carcass width so I can still use cup hinges designed for frameless inset doors.
    --

    The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...

  8. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by Cary Falk View Post
    It is funny looking at the responses saying face frames are more work. I have built face frame cabinets and am now building an entertainment which could be considered frameless. Teh frameless is much more a pain in the a$$ for me. It takes 2x as long and you have to be very accurate. I built a whole bedroom worth of furnature with face frames in the same amount of time it is taking me to build this small entertainment center.

    You need to have an accurate way to process sheet goods with either type of construction, just more so with frameless. Frameless will be a test of sanity if your parts are not accurate, square and chip free.

    The boxes are pretty much the same with either type. With frameless, you edgeband and assemble. With framed, you have to select stock ( Joint and plane if bought rough) , rip, crosscut, assemble, sand, finish and attach to the box. This is a lot of work for a simple frame.

    I am not saying one is better than another,( I actually prefer framed ) just that frameless is A LOT faster than framed.

  9. #9
    Join Date
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    I really think it depends on the style you are going for. I consider frameless designs that strive to look like a classic cabinet door to look mass produced, but there are some very nice frameless designs out there that were designed to look good frameless. If you are trying to go victorian, craftsman, or farmhouse style then frameless looks awful, but if you want something modern then it can be very clean looking.

  10. #10
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    I'm with John Noble on this one. I have just started my kitchen, and am using face frames. As he says the hinges intrude on the cabinet, and since we are building base units with drawers inside allmost all of them, the drawers would have to be narrower, and waste a lot of space. The wife absolutely would not allow that. She wants every square inch of usable space she can get....that is why she has me make them.

    Many of the hinges only open 120 degrees too. Then when the kids open them too far, the door ends up on the floor.

    We prefer the traditional look of the face frames, with hinges and hardware. As said above it's a personal preference. The euro style looks good in a 'modern' style kitchen, it's just not our style, and would not fit in our 'country' kitchen.

    Rick Potter

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
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    Chico, California
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    I'm also with John. I can't tell you how many people's euro hinges I've adjusted, remounted and replaced. These were not my cabinet jobs either, they were cheap to custom cabinets all over the place. Not my cup o' tea. I'm trying to figure how not to have cabinets in my kitchen at all, but since I have only 49% vote here---------

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
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    Every cabinet up here is frameless.. I havent seen an actual face frame in many years..

    If you build the box square.. (actually square).. and own a 35mm bit.. your off to the races..

    The European hinges.. (blum are about all I would use) are adjustable.. not difficult at all.


    As someone else said, Edge banding is the big issue.. I have never used it, but understand that Fastcap makes a self adhesive edge tape in about 70 different colors and species.. I would love to hear a report on that product.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Wellington NZ
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    289
    Same here in NZ,all frame less.
    I go to a joiner who has an edge bander to put 3mm on doors,very strong.
    So much a meter
    .. If walking is good for your health, the postman would be immortal.

  14. #14
    I like the look of the euro-style.

    Doors look nicer without the face frame

    You get more space in the cabinet and larger drawers

    Quality hinges are a must!

  15. #15
    To me the framed vs frameless is a personel decision based on what you want your kitchen to look like and then build for that look, no matter which is easier.

    As far as cost, you will save a bunch by building your own and probably end up with better cabinets. I can see not wanting to spend the time if you are doing all the remodel work yourself as it will add a lot of time. In my case I built the cabinets while the builder was building the house. There was a lot of things I always thought I would do myself to save money that I just let the builder do and I concentrated on the cabinets which gave me more savings than doing a lot of small things. I made mine out of oak ply on the insides with solid oak face frames, oak raised panel doors, oak drawers and used Blum Hardware. My cost was around $3,000 and my wifes quote for the same layout was $9,000. I did spend a bunch of hours on it though. Many, many hours sanding.

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