Honey Brook, PA · Since 1979

Hickory Kitchen Cabinets
in Pennsylvania

The toughest common cabinet wood in America, with grain that tells stories. Built by Amish hands since 1979 for kitchens that work hard.

45+
Years Building
100%
Solid Hardwood
Hardest
Common Species
Free
Consultation
Home  /  Custom Cabinetry  /  Hickory Kitchen Cabinets

The Wood
Hickory Is the Working Wood

Hickory built axe handles, wagon wheels, and ladder rungs. It is the hardest commonly available American cabinet wood, noticeably harder than oak or maple, which is why farm kitchens have trusted it for generations. If your kitchen takes real daily punishment, dogs, kids, cast iron, hickory shrugs it off.

The second thing about hickory is character. The wood swings from creamy sapwood to deep brown heartwood, often within a single board, with mineral streaks and flecks along the way. No two hickory kitchens look alike, and that is exactly why people choose it. The species data at the American Hardwood Information Center and the Wood Database confirm what our shop floor already knows: nothing common is tougher.

We build hickory kitchens from rough lumber in Honey Brook, with the same construction as every project: solid hardwood frames and doors, plywood boxes, dovetail drawers. The standard is detailed in our solid wood guide.

“With hickory the craft is in board selection. We lay every door front out on the bench and balance the light and dark across the whole kitchen before anything gets glued. Skip that step and the wall looks like static. Do it right and it looks like music.”

Our senior builder

Rustic custom kitchen with character grain wood cabinets in Pennsylvania
Character grain balanced across a full elevation
Custom wood kitchen with natural variation and custom hood, Amish-made
Natural color range, from cream to deep brown
Custom rustic kitchen cabinets detail showing wood character, PA
Detail: the flecks and streaks that make hickory hickory

Decision Guide
Is Hickory Right for Your Kitchen?

Hickory rewards the right household and frustrates the wrong one. Here is the honest checklist we walk through with clients:

1
You want durability above all
Hickory outlasts nearly everything. Dents that would mark cherry barely register. For rentals, farmhouses, and families who cook hard, it is the practical champion.
2
You like variation, not uniformity
If you want every door to match, choose maple or a painted finish instead. Hickory’s beauty is the mix. We can calm it by selecting tighter boards, but we cannot make it beige, and we would talk you out of trying.
3
Your style leans rustic, farmhouse, or lodge
Hickory suits rooms with texture: exposed beams, stone, iron hardware. See our modern rustic kitchen project for the direction.
4
You want character without full commitment
A hickory island under a painted perimeter, or hickory open shelving, brings the grain in at accent scale. The same trick we use with walnut.

Custom kitchen island in rustic wood kitchen built in Pennsylvania
An island can carry the character for the whole room
Rustic kitchen cabinets with custom range hood, Amish craftsmanship
Custom hood work in a character-wood kitchen
Custom wood kitchen detail with open shelving, Pennsylvania cabinet shop
Open shelving in solid stock

Living With It
Care, Finish, and How Hickory Ages

Hickory takes clear finishes beautifully and needs no stain to be interesting; most of our hickory kitchens get catalyzed conversion varnish over natural wood. Stains work but fight the wood’s own contrast, so we usually recommend letting hickory be hickory. Rustic and knotty grades push the character further; calmer select grades pull it back.

Maintenance is the easy part. Wipe with a damp cloth and mild soap, avoid soaking the joints, and the finish will outlast most marriages. Hardware matters more than usual here: oil-rubbed bronze and black iron suit the wood; polished chrome argues with it. If you are pairing hickory with other species in a two-tone scheme, our painted and two-tone guide covers the logic, and our cherry and white oak pages cover the alternatives.


Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Honestly, it depends on more variables than any web page can price: the wood species, the finish, the door style, how much of the room is cabinetry, and the condition of the walls we are building against. Two kitchens of the same size can land far apart. We explain the methodology in our kitchen cost guide, and the fastest way to a real number is a free consultation with your measurements.
Yes, and that is our problem, not yours. It is tough on blades and demands sharp tooling and patience. Shops that machine it casually get tearout; we have built with it for decades.
It can, in slab doors across a big wall. Shaker doors, calmer board selection, and pairing with painted cabinetry tame it. We will show you real door samples so you can judge, not guess.
It mellows slightly golden but far less dramatically than cherry. The contrast between light and dark boards softens a little. What you approve on day one is close to what you live with.
Yes. Accent-scale hickory is one of our favorite recommendations: all the character, none of the commitment. See the custom islands page.


Meet Hickory in Person

Photos flatten this wood. Come to the Honey Brook showroom, hold a door, and see the grain move in the light. Then decide.