Couple Spray Painted Their Wood Cabinets White and the Kitchen Looked Newly Built

Wood cabinets dominated this kitchen for years. Quartz countertops, a geometric tile backsplash, and black appliances were already in place, but the stained finish continued to define the room despite the newer materials surrounding it.

Couple Spray Painted Their Wood Cabinets White and the Kitchen Looked Newly Built
@theatlien513

In a transformation shared by Imgur user theatlien513, the existing cabinetry received a complete repaint. White cabinet paint replaced the original wood finish, new black hardware was installed throughout the kitchen, and the island was painted Sherwin-Williams Peppercorn to create contrast.

The kitchen still has the same layout, countertops, backsplash, flooring, and appliances, but the shift from stained wood to painted cabinetry changed the appearance of the entire space.

Wood Cabinets Defined the Original Kitchen

Wood Cabinets Defined the Original Kitchen
@theatlien513

Raised-panel wood cabinets covered nearly every wall and extended to the ceiling line, giving the kitchen a traditional appearance. White quartz countertops and a hexagon tile backsplash had already updated the surfaces, but the cabinet finish remained the dominant visual element throughout the room.

Old wood cabinets for the sink area
@theatlien513

Black appliances created contrast against the lighter countertops, while the island repeated the same cabinet style and finish used around the perimeter. Storage was abundant, but the darker wood tones kept the focus on the cabinetry rather than the newer materials surrounding it.

Cabinet Doors Came Off First

Cabinet Doors Came Off First
@theatlien513

The transformation started with removing every door, drawer front, and piece of hardware from the cabinets. Exposed cabinet boxes revealed the interior shelving and construction hidden behind the finished fronts.

Doors and fronts removed
@theatlien513

Stacking the doors separately created a clear workspace for sanding, priming, and painting while allowing the cabinet frames to be prepared in place. With the doors removed, it became easier to see the scale of the project and how much of the kitchen’s appearance depended on the cabinet finish alone.

Liquid Sandpaper Prepared the Existing Finish

Liquid Sandpaper Prepared the Existing Finish
@theatlien513

Cabinet doors and drawer fronts were removed and organized in the garage before painting began. Separating every piece made it easier to prepare and coat the surfaces evenly.

Liquid sandpaper replaced traditional sanding across the existing stained finish. The product removed surface sheen and created a bondable surface for primer without stripping the wood. With the cabinet fronts prepared, the project moved to the priming stage.

Hardware Holes Were Measured Before Installation

Hardware Holes Were Measured Before Installation
@theatlien513

Fresh paint covered the cabinet doors, but the original hardware still needed to be reinstalled in the correct locations. Because dozens of doors required matching hole placement, consistency became more important than speed.

A homemade template built from a yardstick was used to mark and drill the hardware locations. Using the same guide on every door kept handle placement aligned across the entire kitchen and avoided the uneven appearance that can happen when each door is measured individually.

Misplaced Hardware Holes Had to Be Repaired

Misplaced Hardware Holes Had to Be Repaired
@theatlien513

Not every step went according to plan. Some hardware holes were drilled in the wrong location, requiring repairs before the doors could move to the final paint stage.

Wood filler was used to patch the incorrect holes and restore a smooth surface across the cabinet fronts. Once sanded flush, the repaired areas blended into the surrounding door panels and allowed new hardware holes to be drilled in the correct position.

Cabinet Frames Were Painted in Place

Cabinet Frames Were Painted in Place
@theatlien513

With the doors removed and priming complete, attention shifted to the cabinet boxes and island. Countertops, appliances, walls, and flooring were covered with plastic and painter’s tape to protect surrounding surfaces during painting.

The white primer made the transition from stained wood to painted cabinetry easier to visualize. Once the cabinet frames matched the primed doors, the kitchen stopped looking like a collection of separate components and began taking on a consistent appearance across the entire room.

Paint Was Sprayed Instead of Brushed

Paint Was Sprayed Instead of Brushed
@theatlien513

After priming, the cabinet doors moved to the final paint stage. An HVLP spray gun connected to an air compressor was used to apply the finish coat across the doors and drawer fronts.

Spraying produced a more uniform finish across the recessed panels and trim details than a brush or roller could achieve. Doors were spaced apart on elevated supports so each piece could be coated evenly and left to dry without touching adjacent surfaces. Rows of freshly painted doors gave the first clear indication of the kitchen’s new color direction.

Paint Coverage Changed the Entire Kitchen

Paint Coverage Changed the Entire Kitchen
@theatlien513

The first coat covered the white primer and introduced the cabinet color across the kitchen. Cabinet frames, island panels, and upper cabinets began reading as a single system rather than separate painted components.

By the second coat, the finish looked more consistent across the doors, drawer fronts, and cabinet boxes. The contrast between the painted cabinetry, white countertops, black appliances, and light backsplash became easier to evaluate, giving a much clearer preview of the finished kitchen before the doors were reinstalled.

Black Pulls Changed the Cabinet Style

Black Pulls Changed the Cabinet Style
@theatlien513

Matte black bar pulls replaced the original hardware and created contrast against the white cabinet doors.

The combination of white recessed-panel fronts and black hardware shifted the cabinets toward a more contemporary look while keeping the original door style.

White Cabinets and a Dark Island Changed the Entire Kitchen

White Cabinets and a Dark Island Changed the Entire Kitchen
@theatlien513

White cabinet paint replaced the original wood finish, while matte black hardware introduced contrast throughout the room.

The island received a different treatment. Sherwin-Williams Peppercorn created a dark focal point beneath the white quartz countertop, giving the kitchen contrast without changing the layout. White cabinets, dark appliances, black hardware, and the charcoal island now work together as a coordinated palette.

Sink Wall Shows the Biggest Difference

Sink Wall Shows the Biggest Difference
@theatlien513

The sink wall highlights the impact of the cabinet repaint. White cabinet fronts replaced the dark wood finish, while black pulls create contrast against the lighter surfaces.

Quartz countertops, stainless steel appliances, and the geometric backsplash stand out more clearly than before. The same cabinet layout remains in place, but the updated finish gives the entire wall a brighter and more contemporary appearance.

Painted Cabinets Changed the Entire Kitchen

Painted Cabinets Changed the Entire Kitchen
@theatlien513

The layout, flooring, appliances, and cabinet doors remained the same, but the white paint changed how the kitchen reads as a whole.

White cabinets reflect more light across the room, black hardware adds definition, and the Peppercorn island creates contrast at the center of the space. What began as a kitchen dominated by medium-tone wood now presents a lighter palette built around white cabinetry, dark accents, and quartz surfaces.

Existing Finishes Stayed While the Cabinets Changed

Before and after sink spray paint
@theatlien513

The renovation focused almost entirely on the cabinetry. The backsplash, countertops, flooring, appliances, wall color, lighting, and overall layout remained in place.

Before and after spray paint
@theatlien513

Because the surrounding finishes stayed the same, the before-and-after photos make it clear how much visual impact came from paint alone. White cabinet fronts, black hardware, and the darker island changed the kitchen’s appearance without requiring a full remodel or replacing the existing cabinet boxes.


All image credit go to imgur user theatlien513.

The post Couple Spray Painted Their Wood Cabinets White and the Kitchen Looked Newly Built appeared first on Homedit.



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