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Belwith-Keeler Trellis Collection

Belwith-Keeler Trellis Collection cabinet hardware. The Belwith-Keeler Trellis Collection takes its name from the garden lattice that gives the pulls...

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Belwith-Keeler Trellis Collection cabinet hardware

The Belwith-Keeler Trellis Collection takes its name from the garden lattice that gives the pulls their visual signature: an open woven framework laid across the face of each pull rather than a smooth or fluted profile. The pattern reads as a quiet geometric texture from a few feet away and becomes a clear basketweave at close range. Hardware ships from stock, with most orders moving within 1-2 business days from the Belwith-Keeler warehouse.

Where the Trellis pattern fits

Trellis sits in the transitional camp inside the Belwith-Keeler catalog. The lattice motif borrows from English garden hardware and Regency-era cabinetry, so it earns its keep on inset doors, painted shaker fronts, and bathrooms with hand-glazed tile. It does less for slab-front contemporary kitchens, where the texture competes with quieter cabinet faces.

Buying considerations for Trellis

The collection covers knobs, cup pulls, and bar-style pulls in the same lattice language, which makes it possible to spec one family across an entire kitchen without finish or motif drift. The lattice picks up shadow differently across finishes; satin brass softens it, while matte black reads more graphic. If your existing drawer fronts are deep enough to carry visual weight, the wider Trellis pulls sit better than the smaller knobs.

Related Belwith-Keeler collections

For a smoother transitional alternative inside the same brand, look at the Fuller collection, which trades the lattice for thin clean profiles. Buyers wanting ornament from a different angle can compare with the Berkshire collection, which carries traditional edge detailing instead of a woven face.

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes the Belwith-Keeler Trellis Collection different from plain cabinet hardware?

The Trellis Collection takes its name from garden lattice: an open woven framework laid across the face of each pull instead of a smooth or fluted profile. From a few feet away the pattern reads as a quiet geometric texture, and at close range it becomes a clear basketweave. The collection includes knobs, cup pulls, and bar-style pulls that all share the same lattice motif.

Where does Trellis hardware fit best in a kitchen or bathroom?

Trellis sits in the transitional category within the Belwith-Keeler catalog, with a lattice motif drawn from English garden hardware and Regency-era cabinetry. It suits inset doors, painted shaker fronts, and bathrooms with hand-glazed tile. It does less for slab-front contemporary kitchens, where the woven texture competes with quieter cabinet faces.

How does the Trellis lattice look in satin brass versus matte black?

The lattice picks up shadow differently depending on finish. Satin brass softens the woven pattern, while matte black reads more graphic. Both are part of the same Trellis design language, so the choice is about how pronounced the basketweave texture appears against the cabinet.

Trellis vs. the Belwith-Keeler Fuller and Berkshire collections: which should I choose?

All three are Belwith-Keeler collections, but they differ in surface detail. Trellis carries a woven lattice face, while the Fuller collection offers a smoother transitional alternative with thin clean profiles instead of the lattice. The Berkshire collection provides ornament from a different angle, using traditional edge detailing rather than a woven face.

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