How to Use Oversized Appliance Pulls – Plank Hardware

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How to Use Oversized Appliance Pulls (And Where They Actually Work Best)

Oversized hardware has a reputation. Too bold. Too much. Easy to get wrong.

But 18" pull handles aren’t about excess — they’re about proportion. When the scale of your cabinetry increases, your hardware should follow. Done right, longer pulls don’t dominate a space — they bring it into balance.

This is where they work best — and how to get them right.



What are 18" pull handles used for?

  • Integrated refrigerators and freezers — typically fitted with 18" appliance pulls for better leverage
  • Panel-ready dishwashers — where longer handles improve usability
  • Wide drawers and pantry pull-outs — helping balance larger front panels
  • Wardrobe and closet doors — especially full-height or double doors
  • Tall cabinet doors in larger kitchens — where standard pulls can feel undersized

In short — anything substantial enough to justify both the length and the presence.



Where 18" pulls make the most impact 💥



1. Appliance pulls (their natural habitat)

Let’s start with the obvious. Integrated appliances — dishwashers, full-height refrigerators and freezers — need hardware that can handle both the weight and the visual scale. An 18" pull gives you leverage where it matters, while aligning with the proportions of a tall panel. Anything shorter can feel… underdressed.





2. Wardrobe and closet doors (where things get interesting)

This is where oversized pulls shift from practical to architectural.

On full-height wardrobe doors, 18" handles create vertical emphasis and repetition — turning flat planes into something more intentional. Particularly effective on double doors, where symmetry does a lot of the heavy lifting.

Less “storage,” more “feature.”



3. Tall cabinetry and pantry doors

For cabinets pushing beyond standard heights, smaller pulls can get lost. An 18" handle anchors the door visually and gives you a more comfortable grip across a larger surface.

Form follows function — and then improves it.




What size pull handle should I use? ↕️

A quick guide to keep things in proportion:

  • Appliances: 12"–18" (18" is ideal for full-height fridge/freezers)
  • Tall doors (80"+): 12"–18"
  • Wide drawers: 8"–12"+
  • Standard cabinets: 5"–8"

Rule of thumb: A pull should typically be one-third to one-half the width of the door or drawer.

When in doubt, size up — especially in larger kitchens or closets. Undersized hardware is far more noticeable than oversized hardware done well.

It’s not just about size, it’s about style. The same 18" length can land very differently depending on the detail. Here’s how our core collections show up at scale:



KEPLER — Knurled 18" Appliance Pulls for Modern Kitchens

Clean lines, precision knurling, and a distinctly engineered feel.

KEPLER’s texture adds grip, but more importantly, it adds intent. On an 18" pull, that knurling stretches out — shifting from a detail into a defining feature.

Best for: modern kitchens, slab-front cabinetry, darker palettes, high contrast spaces.



BECKER — Grooved Long Cabinet Handles for Subtle Texture

Refined, linear detailing that doesn’t overplay its hand.

BECKER brings a quiet rhythm to cabinetry. At 18", the grooves elongate elegantly — creating interest that reveals itself over time, rather than demanding attention upfront.

Best for: transitional interiors, warm neutrals, understated kitchens.



● GRAYSON — Classic Oversized Cabinet Hardware

Familiar proportions, softened edges, and a sense of permanence.

GRAYSON is the bridge between traditional and contemporary. In an 18" format, it holds its own on larger doors without feeling overly designed.