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Getting Started
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Design Gallery
Our designers use custom design software to create precise floorplans, elevations and even perspective drawings so you can see in advance how your cabinetry will look.
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Every Schroll kitchen is a custom kitchen. Every Schroll bath, library and home office is unique.

With Schroll, there's no need to settle for a meager selection of stock cabinets. Instead, you can select from a myriad of dimensions, doorstyles, woods, finishes and accessories to create just the look and functionality you're looking for.

But what are you looking for? Unless you're a design buff or an architectural aficionado, you may not be able to categorize what style you like best.

A good way to communicate style to your designer is to collect photos torn from home and design magazines. Keep photos that make you say, "Ooh, I like that"-even if you can't articulate what it is about them you like. Your designer is trained to look through your ideas stack and find commonalities and design cues.

In addition to magazine clippings, the following design categories may help you and your Schroll designer narrow down your design likes and dislikes. As you'll see, Schroll's doorstyles, finish options and architectural details can be combined in an almost infinite number of ways to create all types of designs.


Vintage - Shaker


Vintage - American West


Traditional


Old World


Formal






The look of cabinetry from eras gone by can give your room an instant sense of history and warmth. Examples include:
  • Mission-also called Arts & Crafts. Choose quarter-sawn oak and Schroll's mission finishes. Doorstyles include Centennial, Saratoga and Silverton.
  • Shaker-Shaker simplicity can be achieved with flat panel doors (such as Redstone) and simple crown molding.
  • Country-Beaded doors (such as Aspen), chicken wire doors and bun feet lend the charm of country style. French country and English country are more elaborate, with more curves and ornamental architectural details.
  • Early American-Our inset doors create a look that ranges from formal Colonial to rustic farmhouse.
Our American West collection, with its distressed finishes, work well in vintage designs.


With its open-grained texture and varied coloration, hickory in our more simple doorstyles works well in cabins and other rustic settings. The knots and pits in knotty alder also make it a good rustic choice.


The traditional look combines classic raised panel doors with small to medium simple moldings. Oak creates a more casual traditional look, while cherry creates a more formal traditional look.


This design style uses dramatic details wherever you look. Heavy, stacked moldings, elaborate doorstyles (such as Broadmoor), hearth-style cooking areas and the look of cabinetry-as-furniture-pieces combine to create a style that's sumptuous and elegant.


Doors with raised panels, such as Granby, and applied molding, such as Broadmoor, can be used to create the look of formal fine furniture. Glazed and dark cherry finishes work well here, as do fluted columns, rope molding and other rich architectural details.


Looking for a sleek, clean design? Our simplest flat-panel doorstyles, such as Eagle, together with flat drawer faces, create a look that's decidedly contemporary.