01/13/2026
Walk into most kitchens today and you’ll see clean lines,
efficient layouts, and cabinets that make sense for today's lifestyle.
In the early 20th century, cabinetry was about individual pieces of furniture. Kitchens relied on custom standalone pieces made by skilled tradesmen. These were hand crafted from solid wood when materials were precious, tools were basic, and every piece took weeks to manufacture.
Eventually shortages in lumber and solid hardwoods forced the industry to revolve. Plywood's and manufactured boards began to replace traditional hardwoods. And what started as a necessary substitute quickly became a foundation for change. Today manufactured boards come in hundreds of colors and finishes, they are more scratch resistant, and are common in both interior and exterior cabinet components.
By the mid-century, homeowners wanted more than basic storage, they wanted fashionable kitchens that were affordable and easy to maintain. In Europe, where space and materials were tight,
frameless cabinets showed up and changed the industry. Unlike traditional face-frame cabinets, frameless designs maximized materials, increased useable interior storage and offered a clean, minimalist look at a lower cost. This style, often referred to as the “European or 32mm cabinet”, was the first to use edge-banded panels, concealed hinges, and standardized hardware designed around a 32mm dimension. The “32mm system” opened a whole new market of specialized machinery so cabinets could be built faster and with greater consistency.
Frameless cabinets filled the needs in Europe for simple, functional, and economical cabinetry. However in the U.S., traditional face-frame style cabinets were preferred and custom cabinet makers were slow at adopting this new cabinet system. Traditional woodworking roots ran deep and homeowners preferred the look of inset doors, carvings, posts, columns, corbels, and decorative moldings.
As global design influence spread, European frameless systems became standard in U.S. commercial and hospitality projects first, and eventually spread to residential projects. Today, frameless cabinet styles have taken over as the preferred cabinet type in U.S. residential projects. Simple clean lines, easy access, maximum storage capacity, functionality, and easier maintenance have driven this change.