Jeffrey Alexander Nash Collection cabinet hardware
The Nash Collection is a Jeffrey Alexander line pairing a 1-3/8-inch square knob with a coordinating bar pull, so a kitchen can run one square geometry across doors and drawers. Sample pulls run 96mm and 305mm centers, giving a standard drawer size and a longer span for wide fronts.
What identifies the Nash look
Nash keeps a clean square knob with crisp faces and lightly eased edges, transitional rather than industrial or turned-traditional. The square knob and straight bar share one vocabulary, so upper-cabinet knobs and base-drawer pulls line up visually. Finishes include Satin Nickel, Satin Bronze, Polished Chrome, Brushed Nickel, and Matte Black, covering warm and cool cabinetry.
Buying considerations
Nash suits transitional kitchens and baths with shaker, slab, or recessed-panel doors where a square footprint echoes the framing. Run the square knob on upper doors and the bar pull on base and pantry drawers, using the longer 305mm size on wide fronts and the 96mm on standard boxes so the spacing looks proportional. Matte Black and Polished Chrome read contemporary; Satin Nickel and Satin Bronze warm a traditional room. Keep one finish across knob and pull so the set reads as a deliberate pairing, and confirm each drawer's drilled centers against the available sizes before ordering. The compact square knob gives a firm grip without a deep projection, useful in tight bath cabinetry where a rounder knob would protrude into a walkway. The square footprint also resists spinning loose better than a round knob on a frequently used door. The two pull centers let wide and standard drawers each get a proportional size from one design. On heavily ornamented cabinetry the clean square may read too plain, a tradeoff worth weighing before committing the room.
Related Jeffrey Alexander collections
See the Percival Collection or the Chatham Collection. Browse the full Jeffrey Alexander brand page.
Frequently Asked Questions
What cabinet door and drawer styles work best with the Jeffrey Alexander Nash Collection?
The Nash Collection is designed for transitional kitchens and bathrooms with shaker, slab, or recessed-panel cabinet doors, where the square knob footprint echoes the door's straight framing lines. It is less suited to heavily ornamented cabinetry, where the clean square geometry can read as too plain against ornate profiles.
What pull center sizes does the Nash Collection offer, and how should they be matched to drawer widths?
Nash bar pulls are available in 96mm and 305mm center-to-center sizes. The 96mm pull fits standard drawer boxes, while the 305mm pull is proportioned for wide fronts such as pantry or sink drawers — running both sizes from the same collection keeps the spacing visually consistent across the kitchen.
How does the Nash Collection's square knob compare to a round knob in practical everyday use?
The Nash square knob provides a firm grip with a compact projection, which is an advantage in tight bathroom cabinetry where a rounder knob with more depth could protrude into a walkway. The square footprint also resists spinning loose on a frequently used door better than a round knob, which can loosen over time as the mounting hardware wears.
Which Nash finishes read as contemporary versus warm-traditional, and does the finish need to match across knobs and pulls?
Matte Black and Polished Chrome read as contemporary, while Satin Nickel and Satin Bronze warm a more traditional room. Jeffrey Alexander designs the Nash knob and bar pull as a coordinated set, so keeping one finish across both hardware types is recommended so the pairing looks intentional rather than mixed.
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