Hickory Hardware Crest Collection: Heraldic Cabinet Hardware
What the Crest Collection Is and Where It Fits
The Hickory Hardware Crest Collection is the brand's traditional family with a heraldic accent, built around crest-shaped backplates and shield-form knob faces drawn from European heraldic decorative vocabulary. The line covers cabinet knobs, bail pulls, and matching crest-form backplates in coordinated scales, so a single brand carries across kitchen, bath, and built-in cabinetry. Finishes run warm and traditional: antique brass, oil-rubbed bronze, and satin pewter. Crest reads best in English-country and formal-traditional kitchens, on library and study built-ins, and on dining-room sideboards and estate dressing-room cabinetry. Painted inset doors in deep heritage green, oxblood, navy, and bone give the heraldic detail its strongest backdrop, while stained walnut and mahogany millwork pair naturally with the warmer brass tones.
Specifying Crest and Frequently Asked Questions
For continuity, specify knobs and crest backplates on doors and bail pulls on drawers, keeping one finish across the run. Antique brass and oil-rubbed bronze suit darker, warmer rooms; satin pewter cools the palette without leaving the traditional lane. Hardware ships from stock, with most orders moving within one to two business days. What is the Hickory Hardware Crest Collection? It is a traditional, heraldic-themed cabinet hardware line of knobs, bail pulls, and crest-shaped backplates from Hickory Hardware. What finishes are available? Antique brass, oil-rubbed bronze, and satin pewter. How does Crest compare to other Hickory Hardware lines? Crest leads with heraldic, shield-and-crest detailing; the Manor House Collection reads Tuscan-traditional, and the Williamsburg Collection follows Colonial-Williamsburg reference.
Coordinate with cabinet pulls and cabinet knobs.
Frequently Asked Questions
What cabinet styles and rooms is the Belwith Crest Collection designed for?
The Crest Collection suits formal-traditional kitchens with English-country leanings, library and study built-ins, dining-room sideboards, and dressing rooms in tradition-leaning estates. It reads most coherently against painted inset doors in heritage green, oxblood, navy, and bone, as well as stained walnut and mahogany millwork paired with warmer brass finishes.
What hardware forms and finishes are available in the Crest Collection?
The line covers cabinet knobs, bail pulls, and coordinated crest-form backplates in matching scales. Common finishes include antique brass, oil-rubbed bronze, and satin pewter, all positioned toward the warmer, traditional end of the finish palette.
How does the Belwith Crest Collection differ from the Belwith Williamsburg Collection?
The Crest Collection draws from European heraldic decorative vocabulary, using crest-shaped backplates and shield-form knob faces suited to English-country and estate interiors. The Williamsburg Collection targets Colonial-Williamsburg reference, making it the better fit for American colonial or early-republic styled cabinetry rather than the formal European-heraldic aesthetic Crest serves.
Can the Crest Collection be used across kitchen, bath, and built-in cabinetry without mixing hardware brands?
Yes. Belwith's broad finish range means the Crest line can carry consistently across kitchen, bath, and built-in cabinetry within a single home. Because coordinated finishes are available across the collection's knobs, pulls, and backplates, specifiers can maintain a unified look without sourcing from multiple brands.
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