White River tambour panel describes a solid wood panel with a flexible backing that bends, so you can wrap natural hardwood across curves and corners instead of building segmented facings. The 12 inch width and 96 inch length provide a long, continuous run, which reduces joints when you are working across tall cabinets or full-height wall panels. The 3/4 inch bevel slat in a thick profile creates a distinct linear pattern, giving you pronounced shadow lines that read cleanly on appliance garages or vertical decorative panels. Hard maple construction delivers a hardwood face that can be finished to match many cabinet programs, so you can keep grain and color consistent across a project. The unfinished surface lets you stain, clear-coat, or paint on-site after the panel has acclimated, which supports dialing in color once other materials are in place.
The installation method calls for standard construction or paneling adhesive to attach the tambour panels onto any solid substrate, so you bond the flexible assembly directly to a stable base instead of relying on mechanical fastening through the slats. Using a solid substrate under the tambour lets you shape MDF, plywood, or other core material to your curve, then press the wood panel over it for a smooth, continuous face. The flexible backing allows the panel to follow those shapes while the adhesive holds full surface contact, which helps prevent hollow spots that would telegraph through finishing. Because the panel is easy to install, you can integrate it into cabinet ends, appliance garages, or wall treatments without specialized machinery, focusing your shop effort on core shaping and finishing instead of complicated build-ups.
The flexible backing that easily bends is central to how this Style 202 tambour panel works on site, because it lets the solid wood face conform to curved cabinet gables, rounded island ends, or corner transitions without cutting kerfs into the substrate. The 96 inch length supports full-height applications, so you can sheath tall panels or columns in one direction and then trim at the ends, rather than piecing short lengths that demand extra sanding at each joint. With a 12 inch width, you can gang panels side by side across broad areas, keeping each strip manageable for handling while still covering significant square footage quickly. Natural variations in color and grain add depth and texture to these larger surfaces, so when panels are used in banks, the wood reads as a continuous, authentic hardwood field rather than a printed pattern. In appliance garages and similar cabinetry, the pronounced 3/4 inch bevel slat pattern helps define the opening visually, tying curved or straight sections back into the rest of the millwork.
The unfinished tambour design is specified so the material can stretch and acclimate for at least 48 hours before finishing, giving the backing and slats time to relax under shop or jobsite conditions, which supports more stable joints once stain or clear coats are applied. Hard maple as the chosen species provides a fine, consistent grain that takes many finish systems well, so you can color-match to existing maple cabinetry or run clear finishes that highlight the natural tone. Being made in the USA from premium North American hardwoods helps keep slat sizing and spacing consistent from piece to piece, which matters when multiple panels meet in a continuous line across a wall or long bank of cabinets. Because installation relies on standard construction or paneling adhesive over a solid substrate, the workflow aligns with common shop practices, letting crews integrate this tambour into established casework and panel fabrication sequences without introducing unfamiliar fastening systems.
The White River tambour panel measures 12 inches wide and 96 inches long, giving you an 8 foot run that covers tall cabinets or wall panels with fewer seams to align and finish.
The panel uses a 3/4 inch bevel slat in a thick configuration, creating a strong linear pattern and deeper shadow lines that stay visible after finishing on cabinet and wall applications.
The tambour panel is made from hard maple, so you get a North American hardwood face that supports clear, stain, or painted finishes commonly used in cabinet and millwork projects.
The hard maple tambour panel is installed using standard construction or paneling adhesive over a solid substrate, providing full-surface bonding for curved or flat applications.
The tambour panel is unfinished so the material can stretch and acclimate for at least 48 hours before finishing, helping the wood and backing stabilize before stain or topcoat.
This Style 202 maple tambour is made in the USA from premium North American hardwoods, supporting consistent quality across multiple panels in a single project.
This hard maple White River tambour panel combines a flexible backing, 12 inch by 96 inch size, and 3/4 inch bevel slat profile, so you can wrap curves and corners with a continuous hardwood face. Using standard construction or paneling adhesive over a solid substrate keeps installation straightforward for cabinet, appliance garage, or wall applications. The unfinished, premium North American hardwood construction supports on-site finishing and visual consistency across high-visibility millwork. Choose this Style 202 tambour panel when you need a bendable, solid wood solution that aligns with established shop workflows and delivers a clean, linear look.
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