★★★★★ 5.0 on Google · 125 reviews · 250+ five-star reviews across all platforms · 1,500+ kitchens revived since 2012
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Now Offering: Interior Painting & Exterior Painting

Oak Brook · Chicagoland

Cabinet Refacing in Oak Brook

Cabinet refacing for Oak Brook's 1980s and 1990s estate kitchens. Keep the quality boxes, get a current door style, finished in-house to match. Brook Forest to Ginger Creek. Get your estimate.

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5.0 on Google125+ reviews
250+ Five-Staracross all platforms
Est. 2012Founder-led

Your estate's boxes are built better than most of what is sold today. Keep them. Change the look entirely.

Founder-led since 2012, Fulton Revivals refaces Oak Brook's 1980s and 1990s estate kitchens into the styles people actually want now. New doors and drawer fronts, your good boxes finished in-house to match, the whole kitchen reading as one piece.

Updating Oak Brook's estate kitchens without losing the quality

There is a very specific kitchen all over Oak Brook, and if you own one you know it on sight. It went in with the house in the late 1980s or the 1990s: raised-panel cherry or arch-top golden oak, solid hardwood, beautifully made, and now squarely out of trend. The honey tone reads dated. The arched door profile dates the whole room. But here is the thing the full-replacement remodelers will not tell you: the carcasses are excellent. Built on the original Butler-era large lots, in homes that were not cutting corners, these are the kind of good bones that make a kitchen a perfect candidate for refacing.

Refacing is the move when the layout works, the boxes are solid, and it is the door style and finish that have aged out. We keep your existing cabinet boxes and replace the doors and drawer fronts in the style you actually want now: a clean Shaker, the Artesia with its 45-degree beveled inside lip that is easier to clean and does not hold dust, a Mini Shaker, a Flat Panel, an Adobe, an Asher, or a Connecticut. The result is a brand new kitchen, in days rather than a season, without sending good hardwood to a dumpster.

Oak Brook homeowners have unusually easy access to full kitchen replacement. The remodelers court this village hard. So choosing to reface instead of rip out is a deliberate decision, and it is usually the right one when the kitchen you have was built well in the first place. You are not trading down to update. You are keeping the part that was worth keeping and changing the part that went out of style.

How a refacing project goes in Oak Brook

It starts with a Cabinet Design Consultation. We come to you, look at your existing boxes to confirm they are the good candidates we expect in these homes, and bring the door styles and a finished sample to your island so you can see the new look against your own stone and floors. We help you choose the front, the finish, and the hardware right there.

Then the difference that matters most on an estate kitchen: we finish everything in-house, boxes and all. The new doors and drawer fronts and your existing boxes are finished together in our controlled Pilsen shop, so the whole kitchen reads as one seamless piece rather than new fronts hung on old, mismatched cabinetry. Anyone can hang a door. Making a forty-door run with a long island look like it was always one kitchen is the craft, and it is exactly where a rushed job shows. We bring in soft-close Blum hinges and undermount slides as part of the work, and you can add glass inserts, reeded or frosted, or new hardware while we are at it.

Every project is backed by the Fulton Revivals warranty, start to finish.

Link: See how cabinet refacing works → /services/cabinet-refacing/process/
Link: About cabinet refacing → /services/cabinet-refacing/

In their own words


What homeowners say after the reveal

★★★★★

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!

Jenny T.
Interior Painting · Evanston
★★★★★

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.

Carol H.
Interior Painting · Brookfield
★★★★★

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.

Margaret P.
Cabinet Refinishing · Deerfield

Oak Brook questions


Questions we hear most

What is cabinet refacing?
Refacing replaces your cabinet doors and drawer fronts with brand-new ones in the style you choose, while keeping your existing cabinet boxes in place. We then finish those boxes to match, so you get a completely new-looking kitchen without tearing out the cabinetry or redoing the layout. If your boxes are solid but the look is dated, refacing transforms the kitchen for far less disruption than a full remodel.
How much does cabinet refacing cost in Chicago?
Refacing typically runs $250 to $450 per door and drawer front. To put that in perspective, a full kitchen remodel often starts around $400 per square foot, so a 15-by-15 kitchen can climb to $75,000 to $100,000. Refacing gets you a brand-new look for a fraction of that. Where you land depends on the door style and detail, your materials, one color or two-tone, and the condition and construction of your existing boxes. For a full breakdown, see our cost guide.
Cabinet refacing vs. replacing or remodeling: which is better?
It comes down to your boxes. If your cabinet boxes are solid and your layout works, refacing gives you the new look you want with far less cost, demolition, and downtime than ripping everything out. A full remodel only makes sense when the boxes are failing or you're changing the footprint of the kitchen. Most kitchens we see are perfect refacing candidates that don't need a teardown.
Is cabinet refacing worth it?
For the right kitchen, absolutely. You keep the good bones, skip the demolition, and walk away with cabinetry that looks brand new in a style you actually chose, usually in well under two weeks. The value is highest when your boxes are sound and it's only the doors, fronts, and finish that have aged out of style.
How long does cabinet refacing take?
A typical reface runs about 5 to 10 working days. We finish your existing boxes on-site, build and finish the new doors and drawer fronts at our shop, then come back to hang and adjust everything. The install side takes a little longer than a paint job, because dialing in all-new doors and fronts so they sit square and even is precise work.
Am I a good candidate for cabinet refacing?
The simplest test: if you like how your kitchen functions but not how it looks, you're a strong candidate. Refacing keeps your existing boxes, the good bones, and replaces the doors and fronts, so you get a new-looking kitchen without redoing the whole thing. Most kitchens we reface are honey-oak or golden-oak, arch-top cabinets from the early-to-mid 2000s, dated and aged out of style, where the finish has faded and the hardware is wearing.
What door styles do you offer?
Seven curated styles: Shaker, Artesia (a Shaker with a 45-degree beveled inside edge, our most popular), Mini Shaker, Flat Panel, Adobe, Asher, and Connecticut. Together they cover everything from clean and modern to warm and traditional. They're all the same price, so you choose on the look you love, not on budget.
What are the most common types of cabinet doors?
The most common cabinet door styles are Shaker (a flat recessed center panel in a square frame), flat panel or slab (a single smooth front), and Artesia (a Shaker with a 45-degree beveled inside edge that reads more custom). There's also the Mini Shaker, sometimes called a slim shaker, which narrows the frame for a tighter, more modern look. We offer seven curated styles built around these profiles.
What's the difference between inset and overlay cabinet doors?
It's about how the door sits on the cabinet box. Overlay doors rest on top of the frame and cover most or all of it, which is what nearly every modern kitchen uses. Inset doors sit flush inside the frame, like fine furniture, for a more traditional, built-in look that costs more and requires precise fitting. Our refacing uses overlay doors.
Do different door styles cost more than others?
No. All seven door styles are priced the same. What changes the price is the wood you choose, not the style. We offer paint grade, Select maple, and white oak (plain sawn, quarter sawn, or rift sawn) as our top three, plus other species on request. You pick your style on looks and your wood on budget and grain, and they price independently.
Do you finish the cabinet boxes to match the new doors?
Yes, and we do it in-house. After your new doors and drawer fronts are made, we finish your existing boxes to match them, painted or stained, so the whole kitchen reads as one cohesive, new piece rather than new doors on old-looking boxes. That matched, in-house finish is a big part of why a Fulton reface looks built-in, not bolted-on.
How long do refaced cabinets last?
A long time. Your new doors and drawer fronts are solid, new construction in real wood, and a quality kitchen cabinet has a working life of around 20 years or more. Because we keep your existing boxes and only replace and refinish what you see and touch, you get that fresh, new-cabinet lifespan without the cost and demolition of a full replacement.
What's the difference between refacing and refinishing?
Refacing replaces your doors and drawer fronts with brand-new ones in any style you choose, then finishes your boxes to match, so you can completely change the look. Refinishing keeps your existing real-wood doors, restoring them at our shop and the boxes in place, sanding back the old finish and applying new stain and clear coats so the natural grain still shows. Reface to change the style, refinish to bring back the wood you already have.
Can I reface my cabinets in a completely different door style than I have now?
Yes, that's the whole appeal. Refacing replaces your doors and drawer fronts entirely, so you can go from dated arch-top oak to a clean Shaker, a sleek Flat Panel, or any of our seven styles, regardless of what you have now. You keep your existing boxes and layout, and the look changes completely.
Will refaced cabinets look custom, or will they look cheap?
Custom, when it's done the way we do it. The difference is in-house finishing: we build real-wood doors and drawer fronts and finish your boxes to match, so the whole kitchen reads as one cohesive, built-in piece rather than new doors stuck on old boxes. That matched finish is what makes a Fulton reface look like it belongs in your home, not bolted on.
Can you reface just part of my kitchen, like only the island or just the uppers?
Yes. Partial refacing works well when only part of your kitchen needs it or you want a design moment, like a contrasting island or just the uppers. The main thing we check is that the new and existing finishes work together intentionally, so it reads as a deliberate design choice rather than a mismatch. We'll guide that at your consultation.
What kind of cabinets are not worth refacing?
We'll always be honest about this. Refacing relies on solid existing boxes, so if your boxes are water-damaged, falling apart, or made of a material that won't hold new fronts well, or if you want to change your kitchen's layout, replacement is the smarter spend. If your boxes are sound and it's only the look that's dated, you're an ideal reface candidate.

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