Cabinets — especially painted wood and panel doors — are vulnerable to the same forces as hardwood floors. When indoor air gets very dry, wood components shrink, and that movement can open joints and produce hairline cracks, most visibly at the corners of painted door frames.
Why it happens
A five-piece cabinet door is built from separate rails, stiles, and a center panel. As the wood loses moisture in dry air, the pieces shrink slightly and pull at the painted seams, revealing fine lines. It is often a cosmetic issue rather than a structural one, but it is avoidable.
Protecting cabinetry
- Keep indoor relative humidity reasonably stable — many cabinet makers suggest a range similar to hardwood (roughly 30–50%).
- Add humidity in dry winter months, particularly in homes with strong forced-air heating.
- Keep cabinets away from direct heat sources and avoid letting a home sit cold and unconditioned for long stretches.
Note: some seam movement at painted joints is considered normal by manufacturers and may not be covered as a defect. Stable humidity is the simplest prevention.
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