Wooden Door
SOLID HARDWOOD · ENGINEERED CORE · VENEER-WRAPPED
Front Entry, Interior Pass-Through & Pivot Doors
The front door is the first thing guests touch when they arrive. And the last thing the household closes at night. We build solid hardwood and engineered-core wooden doors in front entry, interior pass-through, oversized pivot, and barn-door configurations. Available in oak, walnut, mahogany, sapele, and teak, finished pre-stained or pre-painted in our spray booth. We hang each door on its frame in our workshop, bore the lockset, fit weatherstripping, then dismount the door for shipping. Your installer re-hangs in minutes. Designed in Guangdong, milled and pre-finished in our owned workshop, then crated for export.
VILLA & COUNTRY HOME
Statement front entries, oversize pivot doors, hand-finished solid-walnut interior doors. Solid-mahogany or solid-walnut front entries with carved or grooved panel detail. Oversized pivot doors on concealed floor pivots. Raised-panel interior doors finished to match the home's millwork. Often delivered as a coordinated package — every exterior, interior, and closet door across the estate from one wood batch.
NEW HOME BUILD
Front entry doors, interior bedroom and bathroom doors, sliding barn doors for a new home. Solid-hardwood or engineered-core, stained or painted to match the home's interior trim package. Common picks are oak or walnut in clear or stained finish for front entry, painted poplar or alder for interior pass-through. Sliding barn-door track and hardware ship as a coordinated kit when requested.
APARTMENT & CONDO
Apartment entry doors, condo unit doors, interior pass-through doors. Engineered-core wooden doors with consistent veneer grain across the building. Pre-bored for the unit's lockset model, hinged in our workshop, and packed in clearly labeled pallets so doors arrive labeled by location for clean install.
BATCH RENOVATION & MULTI-UNIT DEVELOPMENT
Doors repeating across a renovation or development, hospitality interiors, hotel suite doors. Engineered-core wooden doors with veneer-wrapped surfaces in matched grain — every door in the run reads as one continuous piece of wood. Heavy-duty hinges (continuous-hinge or three-knuckle ball-bearing) and door closers can be pre-installed in the workshop.
Wooden Door — Configuration Overview
| Door Style | Wood Species | Finish | Entry Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Raised-Panel Entry | Solid oak, mahogany, sapele | Stained or painted | Residential front door |
| Flush-Slab Interior | Engineered core + walnut veneer | Clear or natural-oil | Hotel suites, condos |
| Pivot (Oversize) | Solid walnut or sapele | Natural-oil sealed | Villa main entries |
| Sliding Barn Door | Solid oak / reclaimed-look | Whitewash / stained | Residential interior, lofts |
| French (Glass-Lite) | Solid oak + tempered glass | Painted | Patio access, sunroom |
| Carved-Panel Statement | Solid mahogany | Hand-finished stain | Estate front entries |
About Our Wooden Door Range
A wooden door is a hardwood or engineered-core entry built around a defined species, finish, and hardware. Front entries, interior pass-through, pivot, French, and barn-door configurations — hung in the frame and pre-finished in our workshop. We build for the owner choosing the front door as the first thing guests touch, and for the builder or installer who hangs it. Wood moves. That fact governs every decision: species selection, core construction, finish system, packing. A solid-hardwood front entry in a coastal climate moves differently from a flush interior door in a dry climate. Our build approach accounts for both. We build solid hardwood doors with kiln-dried oak, walnut, mahogany, sapele, or teak — species chosen for climate and look. Interior doors and high-volume orders use an engineered core (laminated stave or stile-and-rail with veneer-wrapped surfaces). It resists warping while keeping a true hardwood appearance. We fit every exterior door with weatherstripping and a threshold. We hang every interior door in its frame so the gap reveal is right before shipping.
Every order starts with the opening list. Rough-opening width and height for each door, jamb depth, swing direction, lockset model, hinge type. We return a shop-drawing schedule with every door numbered to its location, species and finish specified, hardware called out. The workshop mills the door panels and builds the frames. We hang each door on its frame, mortise the hinges, bore the lockset cylinder, and fit weatherstripping where external. Every door gets trial-swung. After your sign-off, we dismount the doors from frames (hinges stay on the frame side). Both pieces get wrapped in protective film and edge-protected. We palletize door, frame, and hardware together by location number. A PDF install manual ships with each door schedule. Designed in Guangdong, milled and pre-finished in our owned workshop.
After delivery, your contractor or installer handles fitting. We provide an assembly guide and a step-by-step video. Where local installation is available in your region, we help you find a vetted installer.
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Spec Snapshot
A typical wooden door order specifies four things. Species: oak, walnut, mahogany, sapele, or teak. Core: solid hardwood for statement entries and pivot doors, engineered core for interior and high-volume runs. Finish: clear, stained, painted, or natural-oil. Hardware: ball-bearing hinges, mortise or cylinder lockset, weatherstripping on exterior doors. Frames are kiln-dried. We hang doors in the workshop, check the gap reveal, then dismount and palletize by location number for clean install.
How to Spec for Your Project
Start with the door schedule: a numbered list of openings with rough-opening width and height, jamb depth, swing direction, and exterior vs. interior. For each door pick the species and finish. Decide solid hardwood (for statement front entries and oversized pivot) or engineered core (for interior pass-through, hotel suites, and multi-unit orders). Note the lockset model so we can bore for the right cylinder. Building code references covered in shop drawings include IRC R311 for egress (USA), AS 1684 for residential framing context (Australia), and NCC / CSA equivalents. A licensed engineer in your jurisdiction handles final stamping where required. We add fire-rating for compartment-line doors when called out.
Frequently Asked Questions
Owners and builders most commonly ask about five points. Wood species. Pre-finished versus unfinished doors. Solid versus engineered core. Ocean-freight packing. Engineering drawings. All five are addressed below.
What wood species do you stock?
Oak (white and red), walnut, mahogany, sapele, and teak are the species we mill regularly. Maple, cherry, and reclaimed-look oak are available on request. We ship a grain sample — a small offcut from the actual batch we'd use — for sign-off before milling the full order. Hardwood looks different from one batch to the next.
Can you supply pre-finished or unfinished doors?
Both. Pre-finished doors are stained, painted, or natural-oil sealed in our spray booth and arrive ready to hang. Unfinished doors arrive sanded and sealed but unfinished, so your site finisher can stain and topcoat them to match the home's trim millwork exactly. Most volume orders go pre-finished; villa orders often prefer site-finishing for color match.
Solid hardwood versus engineered-core — which one for which application?
Solid hardwood is the right choice for statement front entries and oversize pivot doors. The look of solid wood matters; the door is heavy by design. Engineered-core (with hardwood veneer) is the right choice for interior pass-through doors, high-volume commercial doors, and multifamily unit doors. It resists warping in HVAC-controlled spaces and ships at a lower weight. We recommend the right option per door at the drawing stage.
How is a pre-hung wooden door packed for ocean freight?
Door panel and frame are wrapped separately in protective film, edge-protected with foam, and palletized together with the hardware bundle. Pre-finished doors get an additional surface-protection film on the face so the finish isn't scuffed in transit. Each door is labeled with its location number on the door schedule.
Do you provide drawings my local engineer can stamp?
Yes. Shop drawings reference the relevant code families for the United States, Australia, and Canada (IRC, IBC, AS 1657, AS 1288, NCC, CSA). For wooden doors the engineering review usually covers fire-rating where required, exterior weatherproofing, and hardware compatibility. A licensed engineer in your jurisdiction handles final stamping.
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