Joe the owner is a pleasure to work with. The quoting process is meticulous and he helped me devise solutions and help me update the condo's look while keeping costs reasonable. Any issues from walkthrough is quickly addressed and Brayan from Joe's crew did a good job painting the various parts of the apartment. Will definitely work with them again and recommend Fulton Revival to anyone looking at painting jobs. Give them a call!
Lincoln Park · Chicagoland
Cabinet Painting in Lincoln Park
Factory-smooth cabinet painting for Lincoln Park greystones, rowhomes, and high-rise condos. Period-right color, finished in-house, COI in 24–48 hours. Get your estimate.
A sprayed, factory-smooth finish in the exact color your greystone has been waiting for, on the cabinets you already own.
The right color is the whole project in a greystone
Walk into a restored greystone near Oz Park and the kitchen is usually the one room still arguing with the house. The original millwork is warm and intentional. The trim profiles are considered. And then there is a run of raised-panel oak a previous owner sprayed up in the 1990s, reading orange against everything around it. Nothing is broken. The look has simply gone out of trend, and in a period home that mismatch is loud.
That is exactly the problem cabinet painting solves, and it is the work that built this company. On a Lincoln Park kitchen we are not selling you durability first. We are standing at your counter talking through the marriage of a warm off-white against your hardwood, or a muted sage that finally belongs in a 1900s home, with a finished sample right there so you are not guessing off a chip. We color-match into any Benjamin Moore, Sherwin-Williams, Farrow & Ball, and more, including the period-right palettes a greystone genuinely wants. The finish holds up beautifully, but in Lincoln Park the color is the point.
In a period home, the kitchen is held to the same eye as the millwork around it, and a finish that sits a shade off shows. That is why this is a craftsman's job and not a paint crew's. Roughly half our work sits in condos and association buildings too, so whether your kitchen is a greystone galley or a high-rise on the lakefront, the building side is second nature to us.
How a Lincoln Park cabinet painting project goes
Most of the finishing happens in our controlled Pilsen shop, not in your home, which is what makes the result look factory-applied and keeps your kitchen livable while we work. We bring the doors and drawer fronts back to the shop, and for the boxes that stay in place we encapsulate the work zone in a plastic bubble and run a negative pressure machine that vents outside, so no dust or smell reaches the floor below in a two-flat or the unit next door in a high-rise. Then we build the finish in thin, multiple coats for a flawless, even surface, a real sprayed finish, never a brushed one.
In an occupied Lincoln Park home, the logistics are half the job, and we plan them before day one. For a greystone or rowhome that means street parking, narrow stairs, and protecting original floors and trim on the path in. For a condo it means the certificate of insurance to your management company, typically within 24 to 48 hours, plus elevator reservations, freight access, loading-dock times, and approved work hours. We set the timeline with you from the very beginning, then our only job is to meet it and exceed it.
See the full method: Our cabinet painting process → /services/cabinet-painting/process/
Learn more about the service: Cabinet Painting → /services/cabinet-painting/
In their own words
What homeowners say after the reveal
Joe and his team at Fulton Revivals were excellent and we are extremely pleased with the interior paint work done throughout our condo. They were professional and timely - communicating to us throughout the project. Joe had the team out quickly after project completion to address minor touch-ups post walk-through. Highly recommend and will utilize Fulton Revivals services for future work.
We recently had our kitchen cabinets refinished by Fulton Revivals. Working with Joe and Krystal was amazing and we couldn’t be happier with the results! They were professional, reliable, and went above and beyond to make sure everything was perfect. Our cabinets look absolutely beautiful — it’s like we have a brand new kitchen! Their attention to detail and pride in their work truly show. We highly recommend them to anyone looking for quality craftsmanship and outstanding service.
Lincoln Park questions
Questions we hear most
- How much does cabinet painting cost in Chicago?
- Most cabinet painting runs $150 to $250 per door and drawer front, so the size of your kitchen is the biggest driver of the total. Where you land in that range depends on the condition of your cabinets, the hinge style and overlay, and any repairs like water or impact damage. We price every job down to the penny off our production rates instead of guessing, so the number reflects your actual kitchen. For a full breakdown, see our cost guide.
- How long does cabinet painting take?
- About 5 to 10 working days start to finish. We finish the boxes in your home (usually 2 to 4 days for a typical kitchen), spray the doors and drawer fronts at our shop (3 to 5 days), then come back for a final reinstall day.
- Do you spray or brush the cabinets?
- We spray, always. Every door and drawer front is sprayed in our shop, not brushed or rolled, so the finish lays down dead smooth with no brushstrokes or stipple. That is what makes a sprayed cabinet read like a factory finish instead of a repaint.
- Will painted cabinets chip or peel?
- Not when the prep is done right, which is where most cabinet paint jobs fail. We clean every surface with ammonia and TSP, sand the entire set, lay down a primer made specifically for wood coatings, sand again, then build the finish in multiple, multiple thin coats. The chipping people have seen usually comes from cheap latex enamels brushed over a dirty, unsanded cabinet. We use 2K polys, so we don't have that problem.
- Do you paint the cabinet boxes too, or just the doors?
- Both, so your whole kitchen matches. We finish the boxes and face frames in your home and spray the doors and drawer fronts at our shop, then bring everything back together on reinstall day.
- Where do you paint the doors?
- At our shop, not in your kitchen. A controlled shop environment is how you get a clean, even, factory-quality finish, and it keeps the spraying, dust, and dry time out of your home. The boxes are done on-site, the doors and fronts come to us.
- What kind of paint and finish do you use on cabinets?
- We finish cabinets with an Italian two-component (2K) polyurethane built specifically for cabinetry, laid down in multiple thin coats over a primer made for wood coatings. It cures far harder than the latex enamels most painters use, which is why it holds up to daily kitchen wear. We can match every color.
- Can you paint over stained or wood cabinets?
- Yes. Oak, cherry, maple, birch, alder, laminate, and veneer all take paint well once they're properly cleaned, sanded, and primed, and open-grain woods like oak get extra prep so the grain doesn't show through the final finish. The few things we won't paint are thermofoil and certain vinyls, because nothing holds to them long-term and we won't set you up for a finish that fails.
- What colors work best for kitchen cabinets?
- Crisp whites and warm off-whites stay timeless, while greens, deep navies, and two-tone kitchens with a contrasting island are where a lot of our design-minded clients are going right now. The right answer depends on your counters, backsplash, floors, and light, which is why we pair sizable projects with a designer in The Curated Design Session so you commit with confidence, not on a hunch.
- Is cabinet painting worth it vs. replacing?
- For most kitchens, yes. If your cabinet boxes are solid, painting gives you a brand-new look for a fraction of the cost of new cabinets, with far less demolition and disruption. Replacement only makes sense when the boxes themselves are failing. If you want a new door style but solid boxes, refacing is the middle path worth comparing.
- Is cabinet painting the same as "cupboard painting"?
- Same service, different word. "Cupboard painting" is just the more British or informal name for what we do, refinishing your kitchen cabinet doors, drawer fronts, and boxes with a sprayed, durable finish. If you searched "cupboard painters," you're in the right place.
- Can you repaint cabinets that were already painted?
- Yes. We run the same process no matter what's on the cabinets now: we clean the full set, sand it down, prime, and paint. That way the new finish bonds to a stable, properly prepped surface instead of just layering over an old finish that may already be failing.
- How long do professionally painted cabinets last?
- Done right, a professionally painted cabinet finish lasts many years of daily kitchen use. The key is the system underneath: thorough prep, the right primer, and multiple thin coats of a hard two-component coating that cures far tougher than ordinary wall paint. That's what separates a finish that holds for years from a repaint that chips in months.
- Will the finish show brushstrokes, or is it smooth like a factory cabinet?
- Smooth, like a factory cabinet. Because we spray every door and drawer front in our shop rather than brush or roll them, the finish lays down dead even with no brushstrokes, ridges, or stipple. That sprayed, factory-grade smoothness is one of the biggest tells between professional cabinet work and a DIY or general-painter repaint.
- How do I clean and care for my painted cabinets?
- Easy. Wipe them with a soft, damp cloth and a mild dish soap when needed, and skip abrasive pads and harsh or ammonia-based cleaners that dull any finish over time. We hand you touch-up paint when we're done for the occasional nick, and the cured finish is built to take normal daily kitchen life.
- Do white painted cabinets turn yellow over time?
- Not with the right products. Yellowing is a known problem with cheaper oil-based finishes, which is exactly why we don't use them on white cabinets. The two-component coatings we spray are formulated to stay color-stable, so your whites hold true instead of ambering. It's another reason the product underneath matters as much as the color on top.
- Can you touch up a chip or scratch later, or does the whole door need repainting?
- Most small chips and scratches touch up cleanly, which is why we leave you matching touch-up paint when we finish. For everyday nicks you won't need to redo a whole door. If a door ever takes major damage, we can refinish that single door rather than the whole kitchen.
- Can you paint the cabinets around my sink and dishwasher where it gets wet?
- Yes, and those high-moisture zones are exactly where proper prep and the right coating earn their keep. We make sure those areas are cleaned, sealed, and finished to stand up to water and steam. If there's existing water damage to the cabinet itself, like swollen MDF under the sink, we repair that first, then finish, so it looks and holds up like the rest.
Ready when you are
