
Something old is new again with interior doors
Home improvement television shows featuring younger stars are influencing a resurgence in older, more basic interior door styles. Historically, Central Florida homes primarily used interior doors whose style was dictated by price and availability during construction. Before the 1970s, local manufacturers and carpenters produced custom, beefier doors with straighter lines and more panels. However, this method was time-consuming and expensive due to the customization involved.
The 1970s saw the expansion of door plants and component door manufacturing, leading to the mass production of door slabs assembled with jambs and casing to create pre-built units. This innovation significantly reduced installation time and costs. The most prevalent style during this period was a smooth wood lauan door with clamshell casing, which could be painted or stained. While affordable and quick to install, these doors lacked significant aesthetic appeal.
To address the demand for more stylish options, hardboard doors emerged. These doors utilized wood product skins embossed with designs. By the early 1980s, six-panel hardboard doors became the dominant interior door, often paired with colonial casing. They successfully balanced affordability and style, offering a visual improvement over their predecessors. The popularity of six-panel interior door units persists to this day.
Mid-1990s advancements in door skin technology introduced new styles like arch and panel designs to hardboard door inventories. As homes grew larger, door heights increased from 80 to 96 inches, providing a more dramatic look. Sound-proof, solid-core doors were also introduced, offering enhanced privacy for bedrooms and media rooms, thereby expanding consumer choices.
Contemporary homeowners, many of whom grew up with custom, beefier doors, are now seeking a return to these older aesthetics. Masonite, a major door slab manufacturer, has responded to this trend by introducing new styles that evoke earlier designs. Their Livingston interior door style, for example, is a three-panel hardboard door with wider styles, available in hollow or solid core at various heights, designed to mimic the appearance of a custom-built door. Other styles like Lincoln Park, Logan, and Winslow also feature basic panel and straight-line designs, offering a higher-quality look. Homeowners are also opting for wide, thicker eased edge casing to further enhance this classic aesthetic.
Thanks to Masonite's ability to mass-produce these hardboard doors and efficiently distribute them, the cost difference between these new, cleaner styles and the six-panel doors prevalent for over three decades is minimal. Many potential custom home buyers and remodelers, however, remain unaware of these affordable new options. A significant advantage is that there are no Florida Building Code requirements to upgrade interior doors from older styles. Existing homeowners can easily change the look of their homes by contacting a local door shop to match hinge and lock bore locations, allowing for a simple replacement of old doors with new styles. This technological advancement by Masonite allows for the mass production of custom-style doors at affordable prices, a process that once took weeks for a carpenter to achieve on-site, effectively making something old new again.
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