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Wellborn Cabinet ESTATE series Installation And Care Manual page 28

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The Carriage Technique is created by using various techniques which include rub through, small dents and worm holes. Each
piece will vary in the amount of sanding and will also vary within the piece itself. Due to the random placement of these effects,
every door will be unique and no two doors will be identical. The Carriage Technique is available on doors, drawer fronts and
specified mouldings. All other components such as face frames and accessories, such as bookcases, will receive the standard
base finish. For your convenience, Carriage, or the substitution thereof, will be noted for each item in the specification catalog.
This technique's effects will vary within individual doors and throughout the entire kitchen. These features are acceptable on
Carriage Technique and are not considered defects. Therefore, these features are not covered under warranty.
The Cottage Technique is created by applying a coat of finishing stain to the entire door along with an inconsistent spattering.
Spatter is a paint technique where paint is flicked across the surface producing inconsistent spatter on the stained or painted
surface. The product is then finished with our clear resistant top coat to protect the aged look that was created. Each piece
will vary in the amount of spattering which will also vary within the piece itself. Due to the random placement of these effects,
every door will be unique and no two doors will be identical. Cottage Techniques will not match at cuts or corners created during
installation. This variance is what creates the individual uniqueness of each kitchen. The Cottage Technique is available on
doors, drawer fronts and specified mouldings. For your convenience, Cottage, or the substitution thereof, will be noted for each
item in the specification catalog. The special effects of Cottage are not considered reasons for product replacement and are
not covered under the Warranty Program. We recommend viewing a door sample prior to ordering.
The Heirloom Technique is created by adding small dents and worm holes prior to finishing, then adding dry brushing
during finishing. Worm holes are a physical technique of randomly placing small round holes that mimics the look of insect
penetration that occurs naturally in trees and harvested wood. Worm Holes are smaller than Small Dents and will collect a
glaze in varying amounts when applied. Small dents are a physical technique of randomly striking the wood surface with a tool
to create indentations that mimic the look of aged wood. Small Dents are larger than Worm Holes and will collect a glaze in
varying amounts when applied. These indentions then collect varying amounts of glazing to range from being highly visible to
unnoticeable from the finish. Dry Brushing is a hand applied finish technique that accents the ridges and edges of the individual
pieces. Dry b rush strokes are random and apparent, but will vary in thickness, transparency and quantity. Our durable and
resistant topcoat is applied to keep this timeworn look protected. Each piece will vary in the amount of distressing to maintain
a randomness of this effect. The Heirloom Technique is available on doors, drawer fronts, the face frames of Open Display
Cabinets and Bookcases and specified mouldings. All other face frames and accessories will not receive this technique and
for your convenience will be notated in the Price and Specification Catalogs. This technique's effects will vary within individual
doors and throughout the entire kitchen. These features are acceptable with the Heirloom Technique and are not considered
defects. Therefore, these features are not covered under warranty.
The Olde World Technique is created by using various techniques which include burnishing, rasping, carved edges, dry brushing,
rub through, medium dents and worm holes. Each piece will vary in the amount of sanding and will also vary within the piece
itself. Due to the random placement of these effects, every door will be unique and no two doors will be identical. The Olde
World Technique is available on doors, drawer fronts and specified mouldings. All other components such as face frames and
accessories, such as bookcases, will receive the standard base finish. For your convenience, Olde World, or the substitution
thereof, will be noted for each item in the specification catalog. This technique's effects will vary within individual doors
and throughout the entire kitchen. These features are acceptable on Olde World Technique and are not considered defects.
Therefore, these features are not covered under warranty.
The SeaSide Technique is created by using various techniques which include burnishing and dry brushing. SeaSide is available
on a select group of paints in maple, character maple, oak and hickory. Each piece will vary in the amount of sanding and will
also vary within the piece itself. Due to the random placement of these effects, every door will be unique and no two doors will
be identical. The SeaSide Technique is available on doors, drawer fronts and specified mouldings. All other components such as
face frames and accessories, such as bookcases, will receive the standard base finish. For your convenience, SeaSide, or the
substitution thereof, will be noted for each item in the specification catalog. This technique's effects will vary within individual
doors and throughout the entire kitchen. These features are acceptable on SeaSide Technique and are not considered defects.
Therefore, these features are not covered under warranty.
The Vintage Technique is created by sanding through to the raw wood creating a rubbed, worn effect. Then a coat of
finishing stain is applied to the entire door. The product is then finished with our clear resistant topcoat to protect the aged
look that was created. Each piece will vary in the amount of sanding and will also vary within the piece itself. Due to the
random placement of these effects, every door will be unique and no two doors will be identical. The Vintage Technique
is available on doors, drawer fronts and specified mouldings. All other components such as face frames and accessories,
such as bookcases, will receive the standard base finish. For your convenience, Vintage, or the substitution thereof, will be
noted for each item in the specification catalog. All doors with a flat center panel will not receive the Vintage Technique on
the center panel. The worn edges will vary within individual doors and throughout the entire kitchen. These features are
acceptable on Vintage Technique on painted finishes with a glaze technique and are not considered defects. Therefore, these
features are not covered under warranty.
The Brush Finish technique is a hand applied glaze in a subtle brush stroke over laying the paint providing a depth to the
finish not seen with standard glazing. All glazing is inconsistent providing a uniqueness to each part and piece it is applied to.
A Brush Finish is created by a hand brushed technique applied to a contrasting ,opaque base color to look like a brush painted
finish. Due to the unique nature of Brush Finish, Wellborn Cabinet, Inc. does not guarantee that any two jobs or any two doors
will look exactly alike. This variability should be explained so customers understand their kitchen will vary in appearance from
your showroom display or door sample in the overall color tone, the amount of wiping, patterns and the amount of hang up and
coverage. This technique should only be selected after viewing a Sample Front Kit (SFK) in the door style, species and color
the customer will be ordering. Variances in this finish process are common and will not be considered a reason for product
replacement or warranty.
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