What Is a Lacquer Door? Surface and Pricing Info
A lacquer door is a premium cabinet door produced by applying 5–7 paint layers to an MDF surface, sanded between coats. Top-segment in depth and gloss; preferred in modern and classic designs.
Lacquer Door Production Stages
Raw MDF panel is routed and primer-painted. After sanding, two intermediate coats and two final coats are applied. Between every coat, 40–60 minutes of drying and surface sanding. The final coat sets the finish: glossy, matte, or semi-gloss. Total: 7–10 stages.
Advantages
Top-tier aesthetic, deep color, high durability, custom production to any specified Pantone, scratch- and impact-resistant surface. Lacquer doors do not fade with the years.
Where Is It Used?
Modern kitchens, designer cabinets, showroom displays, built-in panels. Lacquer is a strong choice for areas with high heat exposure — next to ovens, above cooktops.
Difference from Membrane
A lacquer surface is a single-piece paint structure; no foil-lift risk after impact. Membrane is faster and more economical to produce; lacquer costs slightly more but feels premium. Lacquer doors hold their value over time.
Pricing Range
At Vellora Kapak, lacquer surfaces are calculated at ×1.35 of the membrane m² price. Example: a model priced at 3,300 TL/m² in membrane is 4,455 TL/m² in lacquer. The configurator updates the total instantly when you select the surface.
Pick the category you want to produce in lacquer, enter your dimensions, and get an instant price.
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