MDF Plastic Wrap Kitchen Unit Doors Refurbishment

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Yojevol

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One of the first jobs to be done in our new abode was to do something about the 17 year old MI5 kitchen & utility room doors and drawer panels; all 28 of them. About 1/3 of them were distinctly 'blown'; the ones near to heat and moisture being the worst, as you might expect. Advice from my interior designer daughter was to just get a set of replacement doors. This approach didn't appeal to a lifelong diy-er, so I looked into painting them. There wasn't much on the net to go on apart from commercial refurbishers. I did find one obscure article by a guy who had successfully done it himself and it didn't sound a difficult process. So, having chosen a colour, I got stuck in:-
1. The starting point:-
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2. Remove the hardware:-
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3. Remove the plastic wrap by slitting round the edges:-
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All but one came of very cleanly. The MDF was coated with, what I assume was supposed to be, an adhesive but, apart from that odd one, the plastic wasn't stuck at all. The guy who wrote the article advised softening the plastic with a heat gun to soften the adhesive if required.

4. Painting. I applied a coat of water based white primer/undercoat by brush and evened out with a smooth roller. The basic plan was to spray finish the final coat but my early attempts demonstrated it was difficult to get paint onto the edges, and into the faux frame and panel detailing, and get a consistent paint deposit elsewhere. To overcome this I hand brushed paint onto the edges and panel crooks and nannies. This left a plane surface to final spray in my lash-up spray booth:-
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5. Reassemble to achieve the desired effect:-
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And all for the cost of about £60 . A friend had a quote for doing this professionally for a similar sized kitchen of over £3000. I can't claim to have achieved a 'professional' finish but it's certainly acceptable to us.
Brian
 
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£60 is very cheap, I don't know what paint you used but you seem to have made it go a long way.

I have used Acid catalysed paint and water based paint and out of the two I found water based to be more of a problem on the edges.

All of the edges do need to have a slight round otherwise the paint does not hold.

A lot of professinal spray painters do what is called a tack coat first, they lightly spray the panel let it partly dry then return it a spray the panel again with a fuller application of paint. The tack coat is supposed to stop the paint from saging/running.

I think you did very well and your kitchen looks very smart.
 
Brilliant, it would seem that wrapped kitchen doors and drawers are prone to blowing, as mine did luckily under guarantee and where replaced, my eventual solution was to sell the house. 😳
 
£60 is very cheap, I don't know what paint you used but you seem to have made it go a long way.
Deluxe water based satin finish mixed to our colour spec @ £38/ltr (Dulux trade centre). Used 1.3 ltr. I wasted a bit on the learning curve. We bought 1 litre originally but had to go back for a 2nd can. We could have bought a 2½ltr can for less than 2 x 1ltr.
Brian
 
Looks well.
Did you use any kind of lacquer to protect the paint?
 
Fingernails are the problem. Be careful every time you open a cupboard door.
A decent hard lacquer will give the surfaces around the handles more longevity.
Also spilt food/grease etc can be a problem on bare paint.
See how it goes.
 
Deluxe water based satin finish mixed to our colour spec @ £38/ltr (Dulux trade centre). Used 1.3 ltr. I wasted a bit on the learning curve. We bought 1 litre originally but had to go back for a 2nd can. We could have bought a 2½ltr can for less than 2 x 1ltr.
Brian

At £38 a Lt it should be good. For a kitchen your size I'd normally buy 5Lt of a high build undercoat/primer and 5Lt of Laquer. I would have some left which I can later use for touch ups. So I think you did very well.
 
Hi Brian,
Your Kitchen looks fantastic! I was pleased to see your post....I agree with the point on using a lacquer....there are many on the market now in all finishes Super Matt through to High Gloss but just be careful to get a crystal clear one with non yellowing and uv protection or your beautiful colour will be effected...and as Noel said...all the kitchen splashes and oils that get in the strangest of places are the problem...and the natural grease from fingers and hands are the worst! Just think how often you need to clean the light-switches and around door edges 😵‍💫

I have also just done my kitchen in my rented flat but instead of paint, I used vinyl wrap instead...and similarly to yourself .... a neighbour recently had theirs professionally wrapped for about 2.5K...and while their kitchen is double the size of mine and they own their home....I too thought...I'm a DIYer and mixed media/applied artist and therefore decided to update my very tired kitchen myself.
All doors and hardware removed...I cleaned and de-greased everything to within an inch of it's life (HG Grease Away and elbow grease). Filled and sealed any dinks(multi purpose Pollyfilla and pva) and having brought the sample books of the wrap from Create Your World) decided on colours and finish and got cracking...in total, excluding my time..very expensive lol) I spent just under £100 on just the "wrap". However the costs of prep materials, tools, fillers, sandpaper, sealants, paint and trimmings (not just for kitchen...were tripple)

● I fully wrapped the shelves and sides in thick white sign makers vinyl.
● Doors in Cream & Taupe Gloss. Dcfix.
● Work Top in a warm marble
● Door insides a Chalk Board vinyl....to help with the shopping list.

The wrap is easily removed without residue..great for a rented home
The results are below.
 

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