White River tambour panel describes a solid wood panel with narrow slats and a flexible backing, so it bends smoothly and works well anywhere the design calls for flowing curves instead of flat faces. The 12 inch width and 96 inch length give you a continuous run that suits tall cabinets, appliance garages, or custom wall details without piecing short sections together. The 1 inch bevel slat profile breaks up the surface visually, which helps finished installations read as crafted woodwork rather than a featureless sheet. Being part of the Appliance Garages and Tambour Doors class ties this panel directly to roll-top style cabinet openings and similar applications where a slatted surface needs to follow a track or tight radius. Because the panel is made as a single flexible unit, installers can handle it as one component during layout and bonding, which simplifies workflow on curved or corner work.
This tambour panel is designed to mount to a solid substrate using standard construction or paneling adhesive, so installers work with familiar materials and tools during cabinet or wall assembly. Because the panel is supplied with a flexible backing, it can be pressed into tight radiuses while the adhesive cures, allowing the slats to conform closely to the substrate without gapping. The 12 inch width helps on layout because measurements often fall on repeated 12 inch modules in cabinetry, which streamlines cutting and positioning. At 96 inches long, many vertical and horizontal runs can be done from a single piece, reducing seams that would otherwise need extra sanding and filling before finishing. Using adhesive across the full back face distributes load over the surface, which supports a smooth appearance once the tambour is painted.
This White River tambour panel sits in the Appliance Garages and Tambour Doors class, so it fits naturally into roll-top cabinet fronts and similar slatted enclosures where the surface must follow a controlled path. The flexible backing is central to that role, because it lets the 1 inch bevel slats move together while bending around tracks, corners, or curved carcass work without individual slats drifting out of line. The 12 inch width balances coverage and handling; it is wide enough to span cabinet sections yet narrow enough for one person to maneuver into a glued radius or interior corner. At 96 inches long, the panel suits tall pantry cabinets, appliance garage runs, or full-height decorative fields, reducing breaks that might interrupt the visual rhythm of the bevel pattern. Natural grain and color variations within the North American hardwood construction give built-ins and wall work a more architectural feel once painted, because the underlying wood structure still influences light and shadow. Being unfinished allows shops to control priming and topcoats in-house, so tambour areas can be brought into the same paint schedule as doors, face frames, and other paint grade components.
The specified use of standard construction or paneling adhesive provides a clear bonding path, letting installers select adhesives already proven on their chosen substrates while keeping the tambour face free of mechanical fasteners. The flexible backing supports this method by staying in full contact with the glue bed as the panel is pressed into curves or corners, which helps each 1 inch bevel slat seat evenly and minimizes telegraphing or hollow spots. Paint grade designation matters because it guides finishing toward primers and paints rather than stains, which aligns with typical appliance garage, kitchen, and built-in applications where color uniformity is the goal. North American hardwood construction interacts predictably with common shop sanding and finishing sequences, so the tambour sections can enter the same spray or brush workflow as other paint grade moldings. Natural variations in grain and color contribute subtle texture under paint, helping larger fields of tambour avoid a flat, manufactured look. The appliance garage and tambour door classification also signals that this panel is built for joinery environments where movement around curves is routine, which supports repeatable outcomes on similar radius details across a project.
The tambour panel measures 12 inches wide by 96 inches long, so it spans common cabinet sections and tall runs without seams in many appliance garage or wall applications.
The panel is made in the USA from premium North American hardwoods and supplied as paint grade, which suits projects where the tambour will be primed and painted.
The tambour panel is designed to be attached to any solid substrate using standard construction or paneling adhesive, providing a continuous bond across the flexible backing.
The flexible backing lets the solid wood slats bend together into curves and corners, so the face follows appliance garage tracks or radius cabinet ends as a single unit.
The 1 inch bevel slat description refers to the profile and spacing of the wood strips, creating a beveled, rhythmic surface that adds visual interest on doors and panels.
The tambour is unfinished, allowing the material to stretch and acclimate before finishing so shops can integrate priming and painting into their standard finishing process.
This White River tambour panel combines a flexible backing, 1 inch bevel slats, and a 12 inch by 96 inch format to handle curved or corner work in paint grade cabinetry. The unfinished North American hardwood construction aligns with appliance garages, tambour doors, and other projects that demand bendable wood surfaces and consistent painted results. Selecting this TM204-1296PO model brings a defined profile and clear adhesive installation method into your workflow, keeping curved cabinet sections and radius details on a predictable path from layout through finishing.