I will be making new cabinets for my kitchen, last time I did this I was
able to buy just the doors and did the rest myself. The company I did this
with last time is long gone, does anyone know of a good company with fair
prices to do this with? I did a web seach but turned up the normal 50,000
returns. Any help would be great.
If anyone is looking for a old printers table saw my dad has one that he
will be selling, the machine is in CT and is about 700 pounds.
Wayne,
You didn't say why you didn't want to make the doors yourself but to give
you an idea of some cost savings, read on. My sister-in-law volunteered me
to make her new doors for her kitchen renovation - 40 doors and 8 drawer
fronts.
She wanted the beaded panel and wanted to paint them to match other
renovation going on. I selected ash for the rails and stiles and poplar for
the panels. The sizes ran from the short ones that go over the fridge to 7'
long panel to go on the side of pantry cabinet and everything in-between.
We costed these out thru a supplier for Lowes for unpainted, hardwood doors,
no hardware no hinges. With shipping, the cost was nearly $3,000 and she
still had to buy the hardware and do the finishing.
I costed out making them and for all the rough-sawn wood, Blum hinges,
ceramic knobs and pulls, primer, paint, brushes etc. came out to a tad over
$500 for materials. Now I didn't charge any labor and I spent about 30 days
of my free time (evenings, weekends) making everything from scratch.
Sounds like you have enough of the basic tools if you can make the cabinets
so making the doors and drawers wouldn't be that much of a stretch. If you
can find a mill to purchase your stock, some will mill the stock for you to
finish dimensions if you don't have a planer and a jointer. Having a
tablesaw is pretty much a must, a 2.5-3hp router, rail & stile set, a
homebrew router table and fence ( www.patwarner.com ), some clamps (
www.leevalley.com ) and some glue and sandpaper and you're good to go....;-)
You do not need a lot of clamps but having about 6 Bessy K-body's or pipe
clamps of the right size is about a bare minimum. You can glue up 2 to 3
panels (or doors) at once with that many clamps. Depending on weather and
humidity conditions, you can unclamp panels after about an hour and let them
set overnight. So you can get about 3 sets of glue-ups done each evening
with those few clamps.
Point being, if you're so inclined, I think you could make these yourself
and use the difference in cost to purchase a router, bits, planer, jointer,
make a router table and fence, and even add in a dust collector if you're
making a fair amount of doors and drawers. In our case, it was nearly a
$2,500 savings.
Decent router - $250
Router plate - $50
12" Planer - $400
6" Jointer - $400
Clamps - Bessy's are on sale now - see Lee Valleys site and others ~$200
Kitchen door bit set - panel bit, rail and stile bits - $150
Other misc router bits for rounding over edges, etc. $50
Dust collector and hose - $200 - $300
Total - $1,700 - $1,800 (approx)
What better excuse do you need to get a few more tools? Making raised panel
doors is not rocket science. There are spreadsheets available free for
downloading that you just plug in the finished dimension of the door size,
the width you want for rails and stiles and it spits out all the dimensions
for milling your stock. And when you get done - just look at all the new
toys just waiting for the next project............;-)
Bob S.
"wayne mak" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I will be making new cabinets for my kitchen, last time I did this I was
>able to buy just the doors and did the rest myself. The company I did this
>with last time is long gone, does anyone know of a good company with fair
>prices to do this with? I did a web seach but turned up the normal 50,000
>returns. Any help would be great.
>
> If anyone is looking for a old printers table saw my dad has one that he
> will be selling, the machine is in CT and is about 700 pounds.
>
Fer chrissake......when ya gonna buy some real tools......;-)
Well, as I see it then, between your father's woodworking shop and your
machine shop - you can make everything, including the hardware. So why wimp
out on this challenge...;-)
Bob S.
"wayne mak" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I agree about doing it yourself, and see the value in buying the tools and
>doing the work yourself. My father took the wood working road and has a
>full shop with all the goodies, I took the metal working path and have all
>those tools.
> heres my shop
> http://www.motherearthrecycling.net/shop/shop.htm
>
I agree about doing it yourself, and see the value in buying the tools and
doing the work yourself. My father took the wood working road and has a full
shop with all the goodies, I took the metal working path and have all those
tools.
heres my shop
http://www.motherearthrecycling.net/shop/shop.htm
As you can see moving this stuff to make room for all the wood tools is out.
I will be doing most of the wood working at my dads or will pick up a unisaw
and do the work then sell it.
"BobS" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Wayne,
>
> You didn't say why you didn't want to make the doors yourself but to give
> you an idea of some cost savings, read on. My sister-in-law volunteered
> me to make her new doors for her kitchen renovation - 40 doors and 8
> drawer fronts.
>
> She wanted the beaded panel and wanted to paint them to match other
> renovation going on. I selected ash for the rails and stiles and poplar
> for the panels. The sizes ran from the short ones that go over the fridge
> to 7' long panel to go on the side of pantry cabinet and everything
> in-between.
>
> We costed these out thru a supplier for Lowes for unpainted, hardwood
> doors, no hardware no hinges. With shipping, the cost was nearly $3,000
> and she still had to buy the hardware and do the finishing.
>
> I costed out making them and for all the rough-sawn wood, Blum hinges,
> ceramic knobs and pulls, primer, paint, brushes etc. came out to a tad
> over $500 for materials. Now I didn't charge any labor and I spent about
> 30 days of my free time (evenings, weekends) making everything from
> scratch.
>
> Sounds like you have enough of the basic tools if you can make the
> cabinets so making the doors and drawers wouldn't be that much of a
> stretch. If you can find a mill to purchase your stock, some will mill
> the stock for you to finish dimensions if you don't have a planer and a
> jointer. Having a tablesaw is pretty much a must, a 2.5-3hp router, rail
> & stile set, a homebrew router table and fence ( www.patwarner.com ), some
> clamps ( www.leevalley.com ) and some glue and sandpaper and you're good
> to go....;-)
>
> You do not need a lot of clamps but having about 6 Bessy K-body's or pipe
> clamps of the right size is about a bare minimum. You can glue up 2 to 3
> panels (or doors) at once with that many clamps. Depending on weather and
> humidity conditions, you can unclamp panels after about an hour and let
> them set overnight. So you can get about 3 sets of glue-ups done each
> evening with those few clamps.
>
> Point being, if you're so inclined, I think you could make these yourself
> and use the difference in cost to purchase a router, bits, planer,
> jointer, make a router table and fence, and even add in a dust collector
> if you're making a fair amount of doors and drawers. In our case, it was
> nearly a $2,500 savings.
>
> Decent router - $250
> Router plate - $50
> 12" Planer - $400
> 6" Jointer - $400
> Clamps - Bessy's are on sale now - see Lee Valleys site and others ~$200
> Kitchen door bit set - panel bit, rail and stile bits - $150
> Other misc router bits for rounding over edges, etc. $50
> Dust collector and hose - $200 - $300
>
> Total - $1,700 - $1,800 (approx)
>
> What better excuse do you need to get a few more tools? Making raised
> panel doors is not rocket science. There are spreadsheets available free
> for downloading that you just plug in the finished dimension of the door
> size, the width you want for rails and stiles and it spits out all the
> dimensions for milling your stock. And when you get done - just look at
> all the new toys just waiting for the next project............;-)
>
> Bob S.
>
>
>
> "wayne mak" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>>I will be making new cabinets for my kitchen, last time I did this I was
>>able to buy just the doors and did the rest myself. The company I did this
>>with last time is long gone, does anyone know of a good company with fair
>>prices to do this with? I did a web seach but turned up the normal 50,000
>>returns. Any help would be great.
>>
>> If anyone is looking for a old printers table saw my dad has one that he
>> will be selling, the machine is in CT and is about 700 pounds.
>>
>
>
I concur. It is cheaper to make them!
There are drawbacks, and failures in the learning process. You also left out
a good table saw!
What I found is anyone can make anything but some peoples things look
better. I can make a door, but can I make it perfect or atleast with a
minimal of flaws! Then repeat that 40 times or so. If you're a novice and
you want a consistent well made fit and finished cabinet. Buy them. If you
want to learn (and remember wood is not cheap and either is time especially
fixing you mistakes!) and are willing to accept some flaws then be my guest!
To me, getting the them perfect in color consistency across the whole build
and the finish as well.... is the hardest thing to do!
Some people just shouldn't even be allowed to hold tools!
"BobS" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Wayne,
>
> You didn't say why you didn't want to make the doors yourself but to give
> you an idea of some cost savings, read on. My sister-in-law volunteered
me
> to make her new doors for her kitchen renovation - 40 doors and 8 drawer
> fronts.
>
> She wanted the beaded panel and wanted to paint them to match other
> renovation going on. I selected ash for the rails and stiles and poplar
for
> the panels. The sizes ran from the short ones that go over the fridge to
7'
> long panel to go on the side of pantry cabinet and everything in-between.
>
> We costed these out thru a supplier for Lowes for unpainted, hardwood
doors,
> no hardware no hinges. With shipping, the cost was nearly $3,000 and she
> still had to buy the hardware and do the finishing.
>
> I costed out making them and for all the rough-sawn wood, Blum hinges,
> ceramic knobs and pulls, primer, paint, brushes etc. came out to a tad
over
> $500 for materials. Now I didn't charge any labor and I spent about 30
days
> of my free time (evenings, weekends) making everything from scratch.
>
> Sounds like you have enough of the basic tools if you can make the
cabinets
> so making the doors and drawers wouldn't be that much of a stretch. If
you
> can find a mill to purchase your stock, some will mill the stock for you
to
> finish dimensions if you don't have a planer and a jointer. Having a
> tablesaw is pretty much a must, a 2.5-3hp router, rail & stile set, a
> homebrew router table and fence ( www.patwarner.com ), some clamps (
> www.leevalley.com ) and some glue and sandpaper and you're good to
go....;-)
>
> You do not need a lot of clamps but having about 6 Bessy K-body's or pipe
> clamps of the right size is about a bare minimum. You can glue up 2 to 3
> panels (or doors) at once with that many clamps. Depending on weather and
> humidity conditions, you can unclamp panels after about an hour and let
them
> set overnight. So you can get about 3 sets of glue-ups done each evening
> with those few clamps.
>
> Point being, if you're so inclined, I think you could make these yourself
> and use the difference in cost to purchase a router, bits, planer,
jointer,
> make a router table and fence, and even add in a dust collector if you're
> making a fair amount of doors and drawers. In our case, it was nearly a
> $2,500 savings.
>
> Decent router - $250
> Router plate - $50
> 12" Planer - $400
> 6" Jointer - $400
> Clamps - Bessy's are on sale now - see Lee Valleys site and others ~$200
> Kitchen door bit set - panel bit, rail and stile bits - $150
> Other misc router bits for rounding over edges, etc. $50
> Dust collector and hose - $200 - $300
>
> Total - $1,700 - $1,800 (approx)
>
> What better excuse do you need to get a few more tools? Making raised
panel
> doors is not rocket science. There are spreadsheets available free for
> downloading that you just plug in the finished dimension of the door size,
> the width you want for rails and stiles and it spits out all the
dimensions
> for milling your stock. And when you get done - just look at all the new
> toys just waiting for the next project............;-)
>
> Bob S.
>
>
>
> "wayne mak" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> >I will be making new cabinets for my kitchen, last time I did this I was
> >able to buy just the doors and did the rest myself. The company I did
this
> >with last time is long gone, does anyone know of a good company with fair
> >prices to do this with? I did a web seach but turned up the normal 50,000
> >returns. Any help would be great.
> >
> > If anyone is looking for a old printers table saw my dad has one that he
> > will be selling, the machine is in CT and is about 700 pounds.
> >
>
>
http://www.woodweb.com/~cabinetdoorsdirect/index.html
http://www.maplecraftusa.com/index.html
http://www.cabinetdoorsusa.ws/
wayne mak wrote:
> I will be making new cabinets for my kitchen, last time I did this I was
> able to buy just the doors and did the rest myself. The company I did this
> with last time is long gone, does anyone know of a good company with fair
> prices to do this with?
Stew,
I've found and used 3 spreadsheets as I recall. One was really good since
it did all kinds of panels and doors but had a couple of minor errors as I
recall and I couldn't figure out what was causing it. The other two were
much simpler but were all I needed. I'll see if I can't find the link(s)
for the spreadsheet and I'll post it back here.
Bob S.
>
> Any Spreadsheet in particular that you use/recommend?
>
> Stew
> Dunedin, Florida
>
>