Design Assistant
Get inspired with thousands of photos from Sunset and more of your favorite magazines
Rooms
Room Detail
Solutions
HOUSE PLANS
Find A Plan
Idea Houses
CONTESTS &
EVENTS
Visit our Marketplace
Sunset Wine Club
Special Events
Tour Our Idea Houses
Travel Getaways
and Deals
House Plans
Sunset Store
    
MDF cabinets and shelves
Thomas J. Story
The cabinets and shelves in this elegant, budget-minded kitchen are MDF painted white. Design: Cass Calder Smith Architecture, San Francisco (415/864-2800)
Alternative to wood
MDF, a resource-friendly building material, is a good option for interiors

In the past, medium density fiberboard, or MDF — a dense, smooth particleboard made of compressed fine sawdust and hard resin glue — was typically used as a backing for hardwood veneers.

But as high-quality fine-grained wood becomes increasingly expensive, MDF is playing a more visible role in interior design.

MDF is a tan material commonly sold at home building stores in 4- by 8-foot sheets. But it's cheaper than most wood (usually less than $1.50 per square foot) and takes paint easily.

"One hundred years ago, people used redwood and vertical-grain Douglas fir and painted them," says Kim Feldman of Jazz Construction & Development. "We use MDF because it can give us the same refined look, but it's earth-friendly."

In a new home development called French Ranch in Marin County, California, Jazz Construction used 1- by 8-inch MDF wallboards and painted them.

"There's a trick to making MDF look natural," says French Ranch developer and builder Bruce Burman, Feldman's business partner.

"We use spray or rollers to get the paint on the wall, but we finish it with paintbrushes. MDF is a completely flat material, but you can see the brush strokes in the paint, and that makes it look like a wood grain."

MDF ceiling panels
Thomas J. Story
Painted MDF ceiling panels

MDF wallboards
Thomas J. Story
Wallboards (at French Ranch) show the material's flexibility. Design: Bruce Burman and Kim Feldman, Jazz Construction & Development, San Rafael, CA (415/458-5400), with Bob Arrigoni, BAR Architects, San Francisco(415/441-4771)
Published: February 2003