Woodworking Chancer
Established Member
Hi,
First post, I've searched and not found an answer specific to my question so hope this hasn't been answered before.
I'm designing my own inbuilt wardrobes. I think I will aim for 3mm gaps between doors, so my doors are currently 497mm each for two doors per carcass at 1000mm.
They will be slab doors, so the lines need to be really crisp, to my mind. I have two questions:
1) What I'm not sure about is the infills. I think they will look better flush with the doors as they have a bit of width to them (about 75mm each.) I'm getting in a twist with the gaps here - I'm thinking the gap to the infill should also be 3mm so that it's all completely even, but then the door next to the infill will need to move over more, unless I can find a way to attach an L-shape infill with a 1.5mm spacing. How do people ensure nice even spacing to match the door spacing when doing flush infills? At the moment, on my design, the doors sit 1.5mm in from the edge of the carcass, thus creating a 3mm gap between all doors but with 1.5mm to the edge, so I don't think this would look great with the ways I can see to do infill strips.
2) is 3mm OK? Seems to be smaller than lots of shop bought doors which seem to be 496mm, but when I think about my tile 3mm grout lines in my bathroom, they would be quite big for a gap between doors to my mind. Should I aim for 2 instead?
Thanks in advance,
Pete
First post, I've searched and not found an answer specific to my question so hope this hasn't been answered before.
I'm designing my own inbuilt wardrobes. I think I will aim for 3mm gaps between doors, so my doors are currently 497mm each for two doors per carcass at 1000mm.
They will be slab doors, so the lines need to be really crisp, to my mind. I have two questions:
1) What I'm not sure about is the infills. I think they will look better flush with the doors as they have a bit of width to them (about 75mm each.) I'm getting in a twist with the gaps here - I'm thinking the gap to the infill should also be 3mm so that it's all completely even, but then the door next to the infill will need to move over more, unless I can find a way to attach an L-shape infill with a 1.5mm spacing. How do people ensure nice even spacing to match the door spacing when doing flush infills? At the moment, on my design, the doors sit 1.5mm in from the edge of the carcass, thus creating a 3mm gap between all doors but with 1.5mm to the edge, so I don't think this would look great with the ways I can see to do infill strips.
2) is 3mm OK? Seems to be smaller than lots of shop bought doors which seem to be 496mm, but when I think about my tile 3mm grout lines in my bathroom, they would be quite big for a gap between doors to my mind. Should I aim for 2 instead?
Thanks in advance,
Pete