Belwith-Keeler Berkshire Collection cabinet hardware
The Belwith-Keeler Berkshire Collection sits in the ornamented traditional corner of the brand's catalog. Berkshire pulls carry a beaded edge with subtle classical molding running the length of the bail, and the knobs echo that same beading around their circumference. The visual reference is colonial New England casework rather than modern Euro cabinetry. Hardware ships from stock, with most orders moving within 1-2 business days.
Where the Berkshire look belongs
Berkshire reads at home on raised-panel doors, painted inset cabinetry, and the kind of stained-wood kitchen that wants traditional credentials without going full Victorian. The beaded edge picks up under-cabinet lighting and gives the hardware a small visual lift. Against slab-front contemporary doors, the ornament looks dropped in from a different decade, so this is not the Belwith-Keeler line to reach for in a minimalist kitchen.
Sizing and finish notes
The collection runs knobs, cup pulls, and bail pulls at the standard center-to-center sizes used on framed cabinetry. The bead detail catches finish differently across the range: oil-rubbed bronze pulls the highlights against the dark field, while polished nickel evens the bead out into a quieter reading. Pair Berkshire with a single complementary knob style; mixing two ornamented profiles inside one room reads busy.
Related Belwith-Keeler collections
For a quieter alternative in the same brand, the Fuller collection trades beaded ornament for clean transitional profiles. The Avenue collection sits between the two, and the full Belwith-Keeler brand page shows the rest of the line.
Frequently Asked Questions
What style of cabinetry is the Belwith-Keeler Berkshire Collection designed for?
The Berkshire Collection is designed for traditional and colonial-style cabinetry, including raised-panel doors, painted inset cabinetry, and stained-wood kitchens that call for traditional detailing. Its beaded edge and classical molding reference colonial New England casework rather than modern European cabinetry. It is not suited to slab-front or minimalist doors, where the ornament would read as out of place.
What hardware types and center-to-center sizes does the Berkshire Collection include?
The collection includes knobs, cup pulls, and bail pulls sized to the standard center-to-center measurements used on framed cabinetry. Both the pulls and knobs carry the same beaded-edge detail, maintaining a consistent ornamental profile across hardware types within a single room.
How does the Berkshire Collection compare to the Belwith-Keeler Fuller Collection?
The Berkshire Collection features beaded edges and classical molding drawn from colonial precedent, making it a more ornamented choice. The Fuller Collection, by contrast, uses clean transitional profiles without that surface detail, offering a quieter option within the same brand for kitchens or baths that want less visual decoration. The Avenue Collection sits between the two in terms of ornamentation level.
Does the finish affect how the bead detail reads on Berkshire hardware?
Yes, finish significantly changes the visual character of the bead detail. Oil-rubbed bronze creates contrast by pulling highlights against a dark field, making the beading more pronounced. Polished nickel evens the bead out, producing a subtler, more uniform reading across the hardware surface.
What Customers Say
Trusted by thousands of designers, builders, and homeowners
Kayla Malo is the most attentive and super human ever! My experience with this company is stellar!
Love working with Kayla, she is extremely helpful and quick with responding to my questions!
Kayla was GREAT!!!! Super help and fast answers. One of the best I've ever dealt with.





