Bright Ideas

3 Invisible Kitchen Cabinet Hardware Options for the Minimalist

Not a knob in sight

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Keeping a kitchen tidy shouldn't fall entirely on your ability to clean up—a minimalist slant to the design of the space will ensure less visual clutter before you even start cooking. When it comes to selecting kitchen cabinet hardware, for example, you can spring for "tidier" options. Knobs and long pulls are nice, but they aren't necessary; even a traditional kitchen can do without them! Invisible kitchen cabinet hardware does exist—eureka!—so we've rounded up three of our favorite highly functional options.

Completely Invisible

Push Latches

Installed on the inside of your cabinets, a push latch is a mechanical (or magnetic) device that allows you to simply press on the cabinet door and have it spring open. No hardware is visible at all, and it will work with any most any cabinets.

In a New York kitchen designed by Desai/Chia Architects, the upper cabinets feature custom-made Häfele doors of anodized aluminum and acrylic. Push latches can be installed right inside flush doors like these.

Joshua McHugh

Affixed to the inside wall of a cabinet, push latches are invisible from the outside. ($7, ikea.com)

Mostly Invisible

Integrated Handles

Cabinets with integrated handles will have an inwardly beveled edge for your fingers to wrap around on one side, allowing you to pull the door open toward you. The space created by this design will appear as a clean, recessed gap between each cabinet or drawer—which you can accent with paint or a metallic band, if you like—along the top edge of any below-counter storage, and along the side or bottom edge of upper cabinets.

Cabinetry of blackened wire-brushed oak, featuring integrated handles, and countertops of Zimbabwe black granite make a strong statement in an Aspen, Colorado, kitchen by Atelier AM.

Pieter Estersohn

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Barely Noticeable

Hidden Pulls

Best for below-counter drawers and cabinets, hidden pulls are affixed to the top edge of each door so that just a sliver juts out—some are more invisible, and others, called "edge pulls," are just very, very minimalist—but both are easy to grasp with your fingertips and pull on.

Industrial light fixtures and bluestone countertops complement white-oak cabinetry in a Manhattan kitchen; the hidden pulls are by E. R. Butler.

Photo: Miguel Flores-Vianna

Some edge pulls, like these brushed ones from Rejuvenation, hang slightly visible over the edge of the cabinet, while others are even more minimalist. ($18, rejuvenation.com)