What's the difference between liner laminate and decorative laminate?
Short Answer
Liner laminate and decorative laminate are essentially the same product in different thicknesses, made for different jobs. Liner laminate is thinner (0.6-0.8 mm), comes mostly in plain whites and neutrals, and is meant for the inside surfaces of cabinets and wardrobes that you don't usually see - backs, shelves, drawer interiors. Decorative laminate is thicker (1-1.5 mm), comes in the full range of colours, patterns and finishes, and is meant for the OUTSIDE visible surfaces. Liner is cheaper and lighter, so using it inside saves money without compromising looks.
Detailed Explanation
When carpenters and designers talk about 'laminate', they often mean two different products: decorative laminate (the visible, feature-rich one) and liner laminate (the cheaper, simpler one used where no one looks). Decorative laminate is 1 mm or 1.5 mm thick, comes in thousands of colours, woods, stones, textures and finishes (matte, gloss, soft-touch, fluted), and is what you see on wardrobe shutters, cabinet fronts and tabletops. Liner laminate is 0.6 mm to 0.8 mm thick, comes mostly in plain whites, off-whites and a few solid neutrals, has a simple matte or lightly textured surface, and is used on the INSIDE of cabinets, the back of panels, drawer sides, and any hidden surface. Why two products? Because applying a thick, expensive decorative laminate to a surface no one ever sees would be wasteful - liner gives you a clean finished interior surface (so the bare ply isn't visible and dust doesn't catch on rough wood) at a fraction of the cost. Important: every panel should be laminated on BOTH sides to prevent warping - decorative on the visible face, liner on the hidden face is the standard build.
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