White River tambour panel describes a solid wood panel with a flexible backing, so the panel bends to follow curves and corners where rigid panels will not, which matters when building appliance garages or radius cabinetry that need smooth movement around corners. This White River tambour panel uses solid white oak, so the surface brings natural wood character to millwork, which matters when matching other white oak components in the same project. Each panel is 12 inches wide and 48 inches long, so one piece spans common cabinet or appliance garage openings, which matters when you want predictable coverage from a single stock size. The panel uses 1-1/2 inch bevel slats in a thin profile, shaping the face into repeating narrow bevels, which matters when you want a refined linear look instead of wide boards. Tambour is supplied unfinished, so the white oak surface accepts your chosen finish system, which matters when matching existing stain schedules or topcoats across a job.
This white oak tambour panel is installed using standard construction or paneling adhesive, so the panel bonds directly to a solid substrate, which matters when you want a continuous backing for long-term stability. The need for a solid substrate means the flexible-backed panel relies on that surface for support, which matters when planning curved doors, end panels, or appliance garages that still need structural stiffness. Tambour is described as easy to install, so the adhesive-based method fits normal shop workflows, which matters when integrating these panels into existing cabinet case construction without specialized jigs. The product notes that tambour is unfinished and should be allowed to stretch and acclimate for at least 48 hours before finishing, which matters because the material can settle in shape before you apply stains or topcoats.
This Style 206 tambour panel falls under appliance garages and tambour doors, so it is suited to applications where a flexible wood surface needs to travel along a curve, which matters in upper cabinet garages and similar enclosures. The flexible backing that easily bends means the panel follows tracks or curved frames, which matters when designing radius fronts or sliding enclosures that move smoothly. The solid wood, white oak face slots into decorative hardware and moldings and wood panels work, so it integrates with trim, valances, and face frames that share the same species, which matters for visually continuous runs. Each panel uses natural variations in color and grain, so no two lengths look identical, which matters when you want depth and texture instead of a flat, uniform board appearance in focal areas. Being made in the USA from premium North American hardwoods ties the tambour to domestic hardwood supply, which matters for shops that standardize on these materials for predictable machining.
The 1-1/2 inch bevel slat thin profile defines the joint pattern across the panel, so every visible line has the same spacing, which matters when aligning adjacent panels or wrapping a corner where the rhythm must stay consistent. The 12 inch width simplifies layout by giving a fixed module to work from, which matters when calculating how many runs are needed across a bank of cabinets or an appliance garage opening. The 48 inch length offers generous coverage for many cabinet heights or tambour door runs, which matters when you want to limit seams and maintain a continuous pattern. The flexible backing that easily bends keeps slats tied together while allowing movement, which matters for routing the panel along guides or curved substrates without individual slats drifting. Leaving the tambour unfinished until after it stretches and acclimates for at least 48 hours lets the assembly find its resting position, which matters because finishing afterward locks that settled geometry into a stable, service-ready panel.
The TM206-1248WO panel measures 12 inches wide and 48 inches long, so one panel spans many standard cabinet or appliance garage openings with a single continuous tambour surface.
This Style 206 tambour panel is made from solid white oak using premium North American hardwoods, so it provides a genuine hardwood surface that matches other white oak components in a project.
The flexible backing lets the solid wood slats bend as a unit, so the tambour can follow curves and corners, which is important for appliance garages and radius cabinet fronts.
This white oak tambour panel is installed using standard construction or paneling adhesive onto a solid substrate, so it bonds firmly while the substrate provides structural support.
The tambour panel is supplied unfinished and should stretch and acclimate for at least 48 hours before finishing, so the material can settle before stain or topcoat is applied.
The 1-1/2 inch bevel slats create a narrow, repeating bevel pattern, so the finished surface shows a consistent linear texture that reads cleanly across doors or curved panels.
This white oak tambour panel from White River combines a flexible backing, 12 inch by 48 inch size, and 1-1/2 inch bevel slats, so it supports curved or straight runs where matching white oak and controlled texture matter. The unfinished, premium North American hardwood construction lets the panel acclimate and then finish alongside other shop components, so color and sheen stay consistent across the job. For appliance garages, curved fronts, or decorative panels that need real white oak in a bendable format, this Style 206 TM206-1248WO panel provides a straightforward, adhesive-mounted solution.