In mitered doors the stiles and rails meet at a 45 degree angle.
Cope and stick cabinet doors vs mitered.
Cope and stick joints.
The cope and stick joint for cabinet doors is made with a mortise and tenon joint.
The more detailed doors are harder on the finisher too.
Cope and stick doors differ from the other 5 piece design by the method of joining the frame.
You can t profile the outer edge of cope and stick until after assembly.
Mitered vs cope tenon cabinet doors.
Still in certain situations a miter is the better choice.
Mitered vs cope and stick cabinet doors.
Most end up being mitered simply for the look they can t get with cope and stick and the cost of applied molding doors making them an attractive alternative.
The cabinet is painted white no glaze.
This drawing shows the difference between the mitered joint and the cope and stick joint.
A cope and stick joint also makes it possible to trim the door after it s assembled you can take a little off of one edge or trim the door slightly out of square to match an out of whack cabinet opening without any noticeable change in the appearance of the door or the joint.
You need a stick and cope door in the plain white paint see more.
Then you just chop off the door frame lengths you need as a miter joint.
In mitered cabinet doors the method of joining the stiles and rails is different.
The stiles and rails in cope stick doors meet at a 90 degree angle using a machining method called coping.
Mitered and applied molding tend to be higher end.
Would a cope and stick construction be a better choice.
While cope stick doors are joined at a 90 degree angle mitered doors are assembled by cutting the stiles and rails at a 45 degree angle.
Shop cope stick cabinet doors at the door stop.
No reason why you can t use the stick profile sans cope to produce lots of linear feet of door frame molding followed by outer edge profile.
Comments 1 mortis and tenon are much more sustainable also more high end see more.
See the post on what is a mitered cabinet door for more info.
The two are similar in that they use 4 frame sections and a center panel but differ in the way the 4 frame sections are joined.