Laminates

What is PVC edge banding and do I need it for laminated furniture?

Short Answer
PVC edge banding is a thin strip of plastic (0.4-2 mm) heat-glued onto the exposed edges of plywood or particle board to cover the raw cut edge after the panel is laminated. You need it on every visible edge of a laminated panel - without it, the layered ply edge shows and is also vulnerable to moisture creeping in. It comes in colours and wood-grains that match popular laminate finishes.

Detailed Explanation

When you laminate a plywood or particle board panel, the top and bottom faces are sealed by the laminate, but the cut edges are still raw - the layered cross-section of the wood is exposed. PVC edge banding solves this in two ways: cosmetically, it gives the edge a clean, finished look in a colour that matches or contrasts with your laminate; functionally, it seals the edge against moisture, dust and chipping. Edge banding comes in different thicknesses: 0.4-0.45 mm is standard for modular furniture, 1 mm gives a more premium look and a slightly rounded edge, and 2 mm is used for high-impact surfaces like kitchen countertops. It's applied with heat (a hot-melt glue activated by an edge-banding machine, or even a domestic iron in a pinch) and then trimmed flush. You'll need it on every visible edge of laminated furniture - shutter sides, shelf fronts, countertop edges, table edges, drawer fronts. Without it, water creeps into the exposed ply, the laminate eventually lifts at the edge, and the furniture starts to look unfinished.
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