Hi everyone - I'm currently converting a van into a camper and am trying to plan out my cabinet fronts, and was hoping some kind folks could help me reach some conclusions as my brain is absolutely friend and a lot of this is new territory. So please forgive the waffling in advance while I spill my thoughts - I will try to be as concise as I can!
In short I've seen enough vans where the finish of the cabinets don't last, and I'm also trying to watch the weight of the construction; practically I don't know how much weight really will affect fuel/handling in a real world sense but it's certainly a consideration.
How to finish?
I've seen enough vans where people have painted their owns doors with off the shelf paints - a commonly taught method is using good quality foam rollers with Dulux oil based trade paint or specialist furniture paint, but I've seen too many that scratch and scuff too easily. My mother in law restores furniture and uses some high end paint and although it looks lovely it just always scratches. In a van the hard wearing nature is all the more important. From my research it seems that kitchen cabinet fronts are usually finished with a 2k paint that has a hardener in it, applied via a proper compressor setup which I do not own. I have considered going down this route, but that's just another thing for me to learn and invest in, plus I understand it's dangerous without the right amount of space, which again I don't have much of.
So an initial question is are there any paints out there that are proven to be hard wearing for this situation that I don't know of?
And secondly is there a way that paints with hardeners can be applied via the little electric hand sprayers such as the Wagner models?
I have also considered getting formica faced ply and leaving a raw ply edge (oiled) like in the photo attached. it can look really smart, but weight may be an issue (see below). I know as well that trim is a common option here, hammered into a routed slot, but I am just not a fan!
Materials
I've also considered just buying off-the-shelf kitchen fronts - I've worked the dimensions out and can make it work and have installed a few so far so have a decent knowledge of how to make it work, but again the weight
may well be an issue as they are all around 18mm thick and dense mdf.
So my other options are:
- Use MDF to make a simple shaker like peter millard does here. This helps save some weight, but if I need to go to MR MDF (Im still undecided how necessary this is - thoughts appreciated) then the stuff weights a ton!
- Go with the above formica idea, and perhaps try to get poplar ply to save some weight
- Ignore the weight and go with pre-made doors.
And as for the carcasses I haven't even got there yet, but will likely either go with some melamine faced chipboard if i decide weight isn't as much of an issue, or just have bare ply with some hard wax oil or similar that I've had pretty good luck with.
As you can tell me brain is mess, so thanks to anyone who has made it this far! If it's any excuse I've got my first newborn in the house and am running on very little sleep!
Thanks again
In short I've seen enough vans where the finish of the cabinets don't last, and I'm also trying to watch the weight of the construction; practically I don't know how much weight really will affect fuel/handling in a real world sense but it's certainly a consideration.
How to finish?
I've seen enough vans where people have painted their owns doors with off the shelf paints - a commonly taught method is using good quality foam rollers with Dulux oil based trade paint or specialist furniture paint, but I've seen too many that scratch and scuff too easily. My mother in law restores furniture and uses some high end paint and although it looks lovely it just always scratches. In a van the hard wearing nature is all the more important. From my research it seems that kitchen cabinet fronts are usually finished with a 2k paint that has a hardener in it, applied via a proper compressor setup which I do not own. I have considered going down this route, but that's just another thing for me to learn and invest in, plus I understand it's dangerous without the right amount of space, which again I don't have much of.
So an initial question is are there any paints out there that are proven to be hard wearing for this situation that I don't know of?
And secondly is there a way that paints with hardeners can be applied via the little electric hand sprayers such as the Wagner models?
I have also considered getting formica faced ply and leaving a raw ply edge (oiled) like in the photo attached. it can look really smart, but weight may be an issue (see below). I know as well that trim is a common option here, hammered into a routed slot, but I am just not a fan!
Materials
I've also considered just buying off-the-shelf kitchen fronts - I've worked the dimensions out and can make it work and have installed a few so far so have a decent knowledge of how to make it work, but again the weight
may well be an issue as they are all around 18mm thick and dense mdf.
So my other options are:
- Use MDF to make a simple shaker like peter millard does here. This helps save some weight, but if I need to go to MR MDF (Im still undecided how necessary this is - thoughts appreciated) then the stuff weights a ton!
- Go with the above formica idea, and perhaps try to get poplar ply to save some weight
- Ignore the weight and go with pre-made doors.
And as for the carcasses I haven't even got there yet, but will likely either go with some melamine faced chipboard if i decide weight isn't as much of an issue, or just have bare ply with some hard wax oil or similar that I've had pretty good luck with.
As you can tell me brain is mess, so thanks to anyone who has made it this far! If it's any excuse I've got my first newborn in the house and am running on very little sleep!
Thanks again