(847) 555-0100 Mon–Fri 8am–5pm · Sat 9am–2pm
Menu
Shaker cabinet doors

Shaker Cabinet Doors.

Clean lines, recessed panel, built to last a generation.

What This Door Style Looks Like

The Shaker door is defined by its five-piece frame, flat recessed centre panel, and clean right-angle joinery. There is no ornament, no moulding, and no decorative routing. The result is a door that is simultaneously contemporary and timeless, which is exactly why it has been the most-installed cabinet door profile in North America for over two decades.

In a Dan Craig Cabinetry kitchen, the Shaker door reads differently than a builder-grade version because the material is different. Our Shaker doors are built from the solid White Oak, Hard Maple, or Walnut milled at our Wisconsin property. The rail and stile joints are tight, the panel float is precise, and the finish is applied by hand. The door is the same construction profile. The execution is not.

Defining Features

  • Five-piece frame with flat recessed centre panel
  • Clean right-angle corners, no decorative moulding
  • Available in painted, stained, and natural finishes
  • Pairs with any hardware from bar pulls to cup pulls to no-hardware push-to-open
  • Works in inset, overlay, and frameless construction
  • The most refacing-compatible door profile in the catalogue

This Style in the Chicago Suburbs

Shaker doors are the dominant profile across Schaumburg, Arlington Heights, Palatine, and Barrington renovation projects, particularly in transitional and modern farmhouse kitchens. They also perform well in the urban Chicago condo market where the clean line reads as contemporary without being severe. If you are in the northwest suburbs and you have not decided on a door style, Shaker is the correct starting point for a conversation.

Can I Get This Style with Refacing?

Yes. The Shaker profile is the most refacing-friendly door style in the catalogue. Because the geometry is simple and the profile is available in solid 1/4-inch real wood, it installs cleanly on existing cabinet boxes with consistent results. If your boxes are structurally sound, a Shaker refacing is almost always a viable path. See our Cabinet Refacing page for the full scope of what is included.

Recommended Path

Based on the typical construction scenario for this door style, we recommend discussing the Cabinet Refacing route at your consultation.

Explore Cabinet Refacing ›

Wood, Finish, and Hardware Palette

Typical Palette for Shaker Doors

Species
Hard Maple (painted), White Oak (stained or natural), Walnut (natural or dark stain)
Finish
Painted white or off-white for farmhouse and transitional; natural White Oak for contemporary; dark walnut stain for dramatic contrast kitchens
Hardware
Bar pulls, cup pulls, bin pulls, or no hardware with push-to-open. Matte black and brushed nickel are the dominant hardware finishes for Shaker doors in the Chicago suburban market.

See Samples in Your Home.

We bring door samples to the consultation so you can see how each profile looks in your actual kitchen, with your lighting and your finishes.

Schedule Free Consultation

Common Questions About Shaker Doors

Is a Shaker door the same as a recessed panel door?

Yes. Shaker and recessed panel are two names for the same construction profile: a five-piece frame with a flat panel that sits below the surface of the rails and stiles. The term Shaker comes from the Shaker furniture-making tradition; recessed panel is the construction term. They are interchangeable in a cabinetry context.

Can I get Shaker doors in a painted finish?

Yes. Shaker is the most common profile for painted finishes in contemporary and farmhouse kitchens because the clean geometry reads well with crisp, matte painted surfaces. Hard Maple is our recommended substrate for painted finishes because its tight, even grain minimises telegraphing.

How much does a Shaker refacing project cost?

A typical cabinet refacing project with Shaker doors in the northwest Chicago suburbs ranges from $8,000 to $22,000 depending on the size of the kitchen and the finish selected. This includes new Shaker doors, drawer fronts, solid 1/4-inch real wood refacing, and Blum soft-close hardware standard.

What hardware works best with Shaker doors?

The Shaker profile is hardware-neutral in the sense that it does not dictate a specific hardware idiom. Bar pulls in brushed nickel or matte black are the current dominant choice in the Chicago suburban market. Cup pulls add a farmhouse warmth. Bin pulls work in an industrial or transitional kitchen. Push-to-open works in a fully contemporary space. We bring hardware samples to the consultation.

Ready to See Shaker Doors in Person?

We bring sample doors to every consultation. No trip to a showroom required. Schedule a free conversation and we will bring the options to you.

Schedule Free Consultation