Kitchen Cabinets - Painting Prep

By Tim Carter
©1993-2010 Tim Carter

Summary: Kitchen cabinets should be clean and properly prepped before you apply paint. Remove cabinet hardware, sand down old paint or finish with sandpaper in a sanding block, and then proceed with your painting.

Small Surface Area - Big Project!

Painting kitchen cabinets is a tough job. I can paint two bedrooms in the time it takes to do an average set of cabinets. To achieve really good results on cabinets, you need to break them down. This means removing all hardware (door knobs, hinges, drawer pulls, etc.). Skip this important step and your paint job will suffer!

Once the hardware is removed it is time to clean and sand. Any name brand liquid soap will do just fine. However, DON'T immerse the wood in water or subject it to excessive water, especially raised panel doors. Water can get in hidden spaces and cause swelling, warping, twisting, etc.! Use damp sponges or rags to clean. Rinse immediately and dry with a dry rag. Do not let the cabinets air dry.

Sand with medium sand paper to roughen up the surface. Coarse sandpaper can be too harsh and cause deep scratches. On wide open spaces use a sanding block or vibrating sander to maintain a level sanding surface. Sand paper in your hands is a mistake. You will sand more areas than others, trust me.





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