Skipping the degrease
Cabinets carry an invisible film of cooking grease and hand oils. Coat over it and you've finished onto a non-stick surface. This is the number-one cause of peeling. Degrease every face, then wipe clean.
Most cabinet jobs don't fail because of the topcoat. They fail because of what happened before it. Here's the prep, the product logic, and the six mistakes that cause peeling, chipping, and yellowing — from a shop that sprays this stuff every day.
Degrease, scuff-sand, prime for adhesion, run a coating engineered to cure hard, and let it cure before heavy use. Do those five things and the finish lasts. Skip one and it won't.
Cabinet doors get touched, bumped, splashed, and scrubbed every single day. A finish that lasts a decade on a wall can fail in months on a cabinet — which is why how you finish matters far more than what color you pick. The upside: the failures are predictable. Nearly every peeling, chipping, or yellowing job traces back to one of six mistakes.
Cabinets carry an invisible film of cooking grease and hand oils. Coat over it and you've finished onto a non-stick surface. This is the number-one cause of peeling. Degrease every face, then wipe clean.
Factory finishes are slick by design. Coatings need tooth to grip. A quick 220-grit scuff dulls the sheen so primer can bite. Skip it and you get chipping at every edge and corner.
Primer is the handshake between old finish and new coating. On slick or tannin-prone surfaces (oak, knotty pine), a bonding or stain-blocking primer isn't optional — it's the difference between adhesion and a coin-flip.
Blunt version: wall paint never fully hardens. It stays soft, marks under a fingernail, and won't take daily abuse. Cabinets need a coating engineered to cure hard — an enamel or a real cabinet-grade system.
"Dry to the touch" is not "ready." Recoat too soon and you trap solvents. Load plates onto a shelf that's dry but not cured and you'll peel the finish right off. Dry is surface-set; cure is full hardness.
Oil-based finishes and cheap enamels amber over time, especially in low light and over knots. For a white that stays white, run a non-yellowing waterborne system. The product choice decides it on day one.
A coating worth running checks all five: cures hard, self-levels (flows out brush marks), non-yellowing, strong adhesion, and washable.
| Coating type | On cabinets | Watch out for |
|---|---|---|
| Flat / eggshell wall paint | Poor — stays soft | Marks and chips fast. Avoid. |
| Oil-based enamel | Hard finish | Yellows over time; strong fumes |
| Waterborne cabinet system | Hard + non-yellowing | Buy a true production-grade line, not "cabinet-ish" |
This is the whole reason Wild Fox Coatings exists. We run a production cabinet booth, and we got tired of watching good prep wasted on the wrong product. So we distribute Novalk — solvent and waterborne industrial wood coatings that cure hard, lay down glass-smooth, and don't yellow. Every line we carry gets run through our own booth before it hits the shelf.
We're gauging demand before our first big inventory order. Reserve yours now at the intro price — you're charged today, and we ship as soon as the run lands.
Every line we carry runs through our own production schedule before we sell it.
The same industrial system we spray on paying jobs — no quote wall, no mystery brands.
Questions on prep or product? You'll talk to someone who runs a spray booth, not a call center.