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Im looking for a cheap solution to get this kitchen up to real estate open house condition. The cabinets aren't standard size and the replacement lead time is well into the middle of the year which is too late so I need to repair the cabinet front which is MDF and the cabinet doors which are chipboard. Already have the paint. What is the list of materials I need to do this.
Hello @threemonkeys
I suggest having a look at these three possible methods to fix your water damaged doors.
Any other laminate parts that are lifting up can be glued down using Parfix 500ml Fast Grip Adhesive.
Let me call on our experienced members @Dave-1 and @Nailbag for their recommendations.
If you need further assistance, please let us know.
Eric
Morning @threemonkeys
I would suggest to make some copys of the doors and replace the mdf as the easiest option. I dont think it will be easy to get the existing mdf doors back to a nice smooth surface. You could try sanding them but once mdf has expanded then you are really sanding a softer surface.
Once you have replaced the expanded material, then pain and seal. As they are mdf I would suggest a paint for a wetter area.
Dave
I like the router idea, I expect these doors are too far gone for anything fancy though.
I was in the store yesterday looking at some MDF and other similar products but unfortunately Bunnings don't have a custom cutting service. I don't have the space for power tools, a work area, or even a car to transport all this so I'm working with severely limited options (the joys of living in an inner city apartment with no parking).
Replacing them was my preferred option, I'm painting all of the cabinetry and what's staying will need surface prep anyway so I'm not worried about the matching aspect. If I had my way I would completely replace the front, recess those doors, and open up the blind corner for some much-needed shallow cabinet storage.
I'm going to give it a go filling it with some wood glue, clamping it and sanding it back flat and see if I can get an acceptable finish on it. I'm certain whoever buys it will be looking at ripping the kitchen out anyway. I've already have the trades, measurements for the 3D modelling and a few ideas on file with kaboodle so it's already lined up for someone who's got the time and probably better anyway because they can customise it to suit themselves.
Please keep us updated with your progress, we look forward to seeing the kitchen doors repaired.
If you need further assistance, please let us know.
Eric
These are the handles I'm using, the cabinets are going to be painted Taubmans Miss Universe to match the windows I did earlier, the undertones will pick up on the black.
Which way should I put the handles? The draw would be horizontal so I was thinking maybe I should put them all on horizontal and it probably looks a bit more contemporary. I'm worried about catching clothing on the handles though and I don't know if horizontal or vertical is worse for that.
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