Looking for custom cabinetry in Flora? Mississippi Pro serves Flora and all of Madison County with custom cabinetry — this is our complete guide, plus a free design consultation right here in Flora.
Free Design Consultation in FloraCall (601) 790-1030Flora is a small, friendly Madison County town northwest of Jackson. Mississippi Pro proudly serves Flora homeowners and businesses. We help you design the layout, bring door and finish samples, and install with our own crew. From established neighborhoods to new construction across Madison County, we know the area, we show up when we say we will, and we stand behind our work.
Our showroom and offices are at 1138 Weems Street in Pearl, and we cover Flora and the surrounding Jackson metro with free design consultations — no charge and no pressure.
We also serve nearby communities: Canton, Madison, Ridgeland.
We carry these custom and semi-custom cabinet lines and install them with our own crew. Come see the doors, drawers and finishes in person at our Pearl showroom, or let us bring samples to you.

Fully custom cabinetry — built to your exact sizes with a wide range of woods, door styles and finishes.

American-made semi-custom cabinetry with a broad selection of door styles, finishes and storage options.

A value-focused line with popular door styles and finishes for kitchens, baths and built-ins.

Fully custom, furniture-grade cabinetry for high-end kitchens and detailed built-ins.

Custom cabinetry offering a range of styles, finishes and specialty storage to fit your space.
Almost every cabinet falls into one of three groups. The difference is how much you can change — and how long it takes to get them. There is no single “best” one; there is a best one for your room, timeline and budget, and that is what we help you find.
| Type | What it is | Sizing & choices | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stock | Pre-built in standard sizes and finishes. On the shelf or a short order away. | Fixed sizes (usually in 3″ steps); a set menu of doors & colors. | Fast timelines, budgets, rentals, laundry & garage |
| Semi-custom | Built to order from standard sizes, but you can modify dimensions, door style, finish and interior options. | Wide choice of doors, colors, glazes and storage add-ons. | Most kitchens — the sweet spot of choice and value |
| Custom | Built specifically for your space and design, with no size limits. | Any size, material, finish, and specialty storage you can draw. | Unique layouts, furniture pieces, exact-fit and high-end kitchens |
This is the biggest structural choice, and it changes both the look and how you reach inside. The diagrams show a front view of each.
A face frame runs across the front of the box. Doors mount to that frame, giving a classic American look and a very rigid opening. You will see a bit of frame between the doors.
Best for: classic & transitional kitchensNo face frame — the doors cover the whole box (“full overlay”). You get slightly wider openings, easier access to drawers and shelves, and a clean, modern European look.
Best for: modern kitchens, maximum accessOn a framed cabinet there is a second choice that changes the whole look: how much of that face frame the doors and drawer fronts actually cover. That is the “overlay.” (Frameless cabinets are always full overlay, because there is no frame to leave showing.)
Doors and drawer fronts cover nearly the entire face frame, leaving only a thin reveal between them. A clean, current look that mimics frameless while keeping a sturdy framed box.
Look: modern / transitionalDoors cover part of the frame and leave more of it showing between doors and drawers. The traditional look, and usually the most budget-friendly.
Look: classic / valueDoors are set flush inside the frame, level with the front — like fine furniture. The most precise fit, and the most premium to build.
Look: furniture-quality / premiumTwo cabinets can look identical on the showroom floor and be built completely differently. Open a door and a drawer and check these four things — they are what separate cabinets that last 25 years from ones that sag and loosen in five.
The box is everything you do not see, and it carries the whole cabinet. Look for 3/4-inch plywood sides — plywood holds screws and hinges tightly, resists moisture better, and won’t sag under a stone countertop. Furniture-grade MDF is excellent under painted finishes. Thin particleboard is the budget choice and the least forgiving if it ever gets wet.
Drawers take the most abuse in any kitchen. The best are solid-wood boxes with dovetail joints — interlocking corners that can’t pull apart — riding on full-extension, soft-close undermount glides so the drawer pulls all the way out and closes itself without a slam. Stapled particleboard boxes on side-mount rollers are the tell of a cheap cabinet.
Doors are what you touch every day. Solid-wood or solid-wood-framed doors feel substantial; painted MDF center panels resist the seasonal cracking that solid wood can show. Quality six-way adjustable hinges let us dial every door into perfect alignment — and keep it there.
Good cabinets use metal drawer glides, sturdy shelf pins, and reinforced corner blocks, and they arrive fully assembled rather than flat-packed. Small details — a finished interior, a matching toe kick, dampened doors — are the difference between “builder basic” and cabinets you’re proud of.
The door style sets the entire personality of the room — and it’s the easiest thing to picture once you can see them side by side.
A clean recessed flat panel in a simple square frame. The most popular style — it suits traditional and modern kitchens alike and never dates.
A contoured center panel that stands slightly proud of the frame. Warm and traditional, great for classic and formal kitchens.
A single smooth panel with no frame. The most modern, minimal look — especially in frameless cabinets.
Doors set flush inside the frame rather than over it. A precise, furniture-quality look — the most tailored (and premium) option.
Bead-board panels, glass fronts, and open shelving for accents, islands and hutches that stand out.
“Wood” cabinets are usually a mix of materials chosen for the job each part does. Here is what goes where, and why.
| Material | What it is / where it’s used | Watch-outs |
|---|---|---|
| Plywood | Layered wood — the top choice for cabinet boxes and shelves. Strong, screw-holding, moisture-resistant. | Costs more than particleboard. |
| Solid wood | Door frames and raised panels — oak, maple, hickory, cherry. Beautiful, sandable, long-lasting. | Can expand/contract and show fine cracks in painted finishes. |
| MDF | Dense engineered board — ideal for painted doors and panels because it’s smooth and won’t telegraph grain or crack. | Heavier; keep it dry. |
| Particleboard | Compressed wood chips, often veneered — common in stock/budget boxes. | Least moisture-tolerant; can’t re-hold a stripped screw well. |
| Thermofoil | A vinyl skin heat-sealed over MDF — a seamless, easy-clean painted look. | Avoid high heat next to it (ovens); can peel if overheated. |
Finishes: Painted gives a smooth, current, furniture-like surface (best on MDF or a smooth wood). Stained shows off natural grain and hides everyday wear. Glazed adds an antiqued accent in the door’s detail lines. We’ll show you real finished samples in your own lighting — paint and stain read very differently at home than on a screen.
Full kitchen packages — bases, uppers, tall pantries and islands — planned around how you actually cook and store.
Custom and semi-custom vanities built to resist bathroom moisture, in sizes that fit real bathrooms.
Home-office built-ins, entertainment walls, bookcases and window seats designed to fit your exact space.
Lockers, cubbies, folding counters and broom storage that turn a hard-working room into an organized one.
New doors, drawer fronts and hardware over solid existing boxes — a fresh look without a full remodel.
If your cabinets look tired, you have three paths. The right one depends on the bones of what you have and whether the layout still works.
| Option | What happens | Choose it when… |
|---|---|---|
| Refinish | Existing doors and frames are cleaned, sanded and repainted or restained in place. | Boxes and doors are solid; you just want a new color. |
| Reface | New doors, drawer fronts and hardware; boxes are covered with matching veneer. | Boxes are sound and the layout works, but the doors are dated. |
| Replace | Full new cabinets — and the chance to change the whole layout. | Boxes are damaged/water-swollen, or you want a new floor plan or more storage. |
We quote every kitchen and bath for your home, not off a chart. Your price comes down to the cabinet line and construction you choose, the size and number of cabinets, the door style and finish, any specialty storage, and the prep or demolition your room needs. We measure everything for free and give you one clear, itemized price — no guesswork.
| 1. Free design consultation | We talk through how you use the space, your style, and your must-haves — at your home or our Pearl showroom. |
|---|---|
| 2. Precise measure & 3D layout | We measure the room exactly and show you a to-scale layout so you can see it before anything is ordered. |
| 3. Choose doors & finishes | You pick construction, door style, finish and storage from real samples — we guide the trade-offs. |
| 4. Written estimate & order | An exact, itemized price. Once approved, cabinets are built to your final measurements. |
| 5. Professional installation | Our own crew sets, levels and secures every cabinet, adjusts every door, and cleans up. |
Stock cabinets come in fixed sizes and finishes and are the fastest and most budget-friendly. Semi-custom start from standard sizes but let you change dimensions, door styles, and finishes. Custom cabinets are built to your exact space and design with the widest choice of materials and storage options. We help you pick the level that fits your room, timeline, and budget.
Neither is simply better - they are built differently. Framed cabinets have a face frame across the front of the box, giving a classic look and a very sturdy opening. Frameless (full-access) cabinets skip the face frame, so you get slightly wider openings, easier access, and a clean modern look. We carry both and will show you the difference in the showroom.
A 3/4-inch plywood box is the most durable and holds screws and heavy countertops best, especially where moisture is a concern. Furniture-grade MDF is excellent for painted doors because it will not show wood grain and resists cracking. Particleboard is common in budget lines but is the least moisture-tolerant. We tell you exactly what each cabinet is built from.
Refacing makes sense when your existing cabinet boxes are solid and the layout already works, but the doors and finish look dated. We replace the doors, drawer fronts, and hardware and cover the boxes with a matching veneer for a completely fresh look. If the boxes are damaged or you want a new layout, full replacement is the better long-term choice. We give you an honest recommendation after seeing your cabinets.
Stock and refacing projects move fastest, while semi-custom and custom cabinets take longer because they are built to order. After your design is approved and final measurements are taken, custom cabinets typically take several weeks to build before installation. We give you a specific timeline in your written estimate so you can plan around it.
Often yes. We can add matching cabinets, reface what you have, or blend new custom pieces with existing runs. Exact matches on older finishes are not always possible, so we will show you the closest options and be straight with you about what will and will not match well.
The Shaker door - a clean recessed flat panel with a simple square frame - is by far the most popular because it fits both traditional and modern kitchens and never looks dated. Raised-panel doors give a more traditional, detailed look, while flat slab doors read the most modern. We have all of them on display.
Both. We handle the whole project - design and 3D layout, precise measuring, ordering, and professional installation by our own crew - so you have one company responsible from first sketch to the final adjusted door. You are not left coordinating separate designers and installers.
We’ll come to your Flora home or you can visit our showroom at 1138 Weems Street, Pearl. Free design consultations across Madison County and the Jackson metro.
Book a Free Design ConsultationCall (601) 790-1030