Laminex NZ: The Cabinetmaker’s Guide to Choosing the Right Surface for Your Kitchen, Laundry or Wardrobe
Quick answer: Laminex NZ is the country’s leading supplier of decorative cabinetry surfaces — including the Melteca melamine range, Laminex Acrylic Panels, and high-pressure laminates. At Little Giant Interiors, we specify Laminex and Melteca products on the majority of our Auckland kitchen, laundry, and wardrobe projects because of their proven durability, broad colour range, and the 10-year warranty backed by a trusted NZ supplier.
If you’ve spent any time researching kitchen cabinetry, you’ve almost certainly come across the Laminex name. It’s everywhere — in showrooms, on trades websites, in renovation forums. But knowing a brand exists and actually knowing how to choose the right product from their range? That’s a different conversation entirely.
We’ve been manufacturing custom cabinetry in Auckland for years, and Laminex NZ products — particularly their Melteca melamine range — are what we specify on the vast majority of our projects. Not because we have to. Because after comparing every option in the NZ market, they consistently come out on top for quality, consistency, and long-term performance.
This isn’t a manufacturer’s brochure. It’s an honest breakdown from the people who work with these materials every single day. We’ll cover what Laminex NZ actually makes, the difference between Melteca and their other product lines, which finishes suit which rooms, and how to pick the right option for your budget and your home.
Whether you’re planning a full kitchen renovation in Auckland, a laundry redesign, or a wardrobe fitout — this guide will give you everything you need to walk into a conversation with your cabinetmaker knowing exactly what you want.

What Is Laminex NZ — and What Do They Actually Make?
Laminex New Zealand is the country’s dominant decorative surface supplier, distributing a portfolio of locally made and internationally sourced products for cabinetry, benchtops, wall linings, and flooring. They’re not a cabinetmaker. They don’t design or build kitchens. What they do is supply the surface materials that cabinetmakers like us turn into finished cabinets — and they do it better than anyone else in this market.
It’s worth understanding the full shape of what Laminex NZ offers, because there’s a lot of confusion online about which product is which. Here’s a plain-language breakdown of their key product lines and how each one fits into a cabinetry project.
Melteca — The Workhorse of the NZ Kitchen
Melteca is Laminex’s flagship cabinet panel product, and it’s the one you’ll encounter most often when talking to any quality Auckland cabinetmaker. Melteca is a low-pressure melamine (LPM) — a decorative surface fused to a particleboard or MDF substrate, producing a fully finished panel that’s ready to cut, edge, and install as cabinet carcasses and door fronts.
It’s been manufactured in New Zealand for over 42 years at Laminex’s Hamilton plant, which matters because local manufacturing means tighter quality control, faster lead times, and consistency in every sheet we order. The full MDF wood used in Melteca boards comes from New Zealand forests with FSC certification — so if sustainability is on your radar, it’s a genuinely credentialled option, not just a marketing line.
Melteca comes in a wide range of colours and six different tactile finishes — Naturale, Puregrain, Organic, Hi-Gloss, and others — each designed for a different aesthetic. Their newest Organic finish is worth a specific mention: it emulates the grain and movement of natural timber in a way that, five years ago, you’d have needed to spend significantly more to achieve. We’ve been using it on more and more projects across Mt Eden, Grey Lynn, and Remuera, and the result genuinely impresses people who thought they needed real timber veneer.
💡 Design tip: Melteca’s Organic finish looks particularly striking on island cabinetry when combined with a lighter upper cabinet colour. It gives you the warmth of timber without the maintenance concerns in a high-use kitchen.
Laminex Laminate — For Benchtops and Feature Surfaces
Laminex also produces a high-pressure laminate (HPL) range — this is the product most people are thinking of when they picture a laminate benchtop. Laminex Laminate is a hard-wearing, heat-resistant surface applied over a substrate, backed by a 7-year limited warranty, and used primarily for benchtops, splashbacks, and accent panels. It’s a different product to Melteca — harder, thicker, and designed for horizontal wear surfaces rather than vertical cabinet carcassing.
One of the clever things Laminex has done is design their Laminate and Melteca colour palettes to coordinate, so you can match your benchtop and cabinet doors from the same family. For homeowners on a tighter budget who want a cohesive, designed-looking kitchen without the cost of stone, this pairing is a genuinely strong option.
Laminex Acrylic Panel — The Premium Matte Upgrade
At the upper end of the Laminex range sits the Acrylic Panel — a premium decorative panel with a super smooth, velvety matte finish, brilliant depth of colour, and superior scratch resistance. Laminex Acrylic Panels are perfect for kitchen and laundry cabinet fronts where you want that high-end, lacquer-like finish without the fragility or cost of actual lacquer. They’re fingerprint resistant, easy to wipe clean, and backed by a 10-year warranty when installed by a qualified cabinetmaker.
The colour range is more limited than Melteca, but that’s intentional — these are curated, directional colours rather than a broad palette. If you’re drawn to deep, neutral tones and want your cabinetry to feel genuinely premium, the Acrylic Panel range is worth a look. We’ve used it on kitchens in Herne Bay and Ponsonby where the client wanted something a step above the mainstream, and every time it delivers.

What Laminex NZ Doesn’t Do (So You Know the Full Picture)
Laminex doesn’t make stone benchtops — they distribute Caesarstone engineered stone separately. They also don’t manufacture hinges, drawers, or lift systems — that’s where our other key suppliers like Blum and Hettich come in. Laminex is specifically the surfaces and panel story. Everything works in combination.
Why Little Giant Interiors Specifies Laminex and Melteca — Not Just Any Board
There are cheaper panel products available in New Zealand. We’ve tested plenty of them over the years. And we keep coming back to Laminex and Melteca — specifically because of what happens to cabinetry five, ten, and fifteen years after installation.
The primary reason we specify Laminex NZ products is consistency. When you’re manufacturing dozens of cabinet carcasses for a single kitchen, every sheet needs to behave identically — the same thickness, the same surface quality, the same edge bonding performance. With cheaper imported boards, variation between batches creates real problems on the factory floor. With Melteca, manufactured locally to consistent standards for over four decades, we know exactly what we’re getting every time we open a sheet.
The Warranty Matters — Especially on Cabinetry
One of the things we always explain to clients is that cabinetry warranty is layered. There’s our installation and workmanship warranty, which covers how the cabinets are built and fitted. Then there’s the materials warranty from the supplier. Laminex backs their products with a 10-year warranty on Laminex surfaces and Melteca panels — which is independently provided by Laminex NZ as the manufacturer, separate from and in addition to our own Little Giant Interiors guarantee.
That 10-year supplier warranty is transferable with the property, which matters a lot in the Auckland market where homes change hands regularly. If you sell your Epsom villa three years after we complete your kitchen, the new owners inherit not just a beautiful space but the remaining warranty on the materials themselves. That’s a real selling point.
“When we’re specifying materials for a client’s kitchen, we’re thinking about how that kitchen performs in year one, and in year twelve. Laminex and Melteca products have the track record in the NZ market to give us — and our clients — genuine confidence over that kind of timeframe.”
— Little Giant Interiors Design Team
Local Supply Means Shorter Lead Times for Auckland Projects
Because Melteca is manufactured in New Zealand, supply chain disruptions that affected imported products during recent years had minimal impact on our production schedule. Materials are ordered, delivered, and arrive at our 700m² Auckland factory within a week — and then manufacturing typically takes just one to two days. That predictability is part of why we can offer the timeline certainty our clients expect.
When you’re living through a kitchen renovation — without a functioning kitchen — every extra day of disruption is a real cost. The reliability of a locally manufactured, consistently stocked product matters more than most people realise when they’re initially choosing materials.
Environmental Credentials — FSC, Low Formaldehyde, NZ Made
This is something that comes up more often in client conversations now than it did five years ago, and rightly so. All MDF used in Melteca boards is sourced from New Zealand forests with FSC certification, Melteca holds Environmental Choice New Zealand certification, and the product is low in formaldehyde emissions — including Lakepine MDF which meets E0 standard, the most stringent formaldehyde classification.
Melteca also supports the New Zealand Green Building Council’s Green Star and Homestar rating tools. If you’re renovating a home to Homestar standards, or working with an architect who has sustainability targets on the project, Melteca fits the spec without needing a workaround.
💡 Design tip: Ask your cabinetmaker specifically about Lakepine MDF substrate options in Melteca if you want the lowest formaldehyde outcome. It’s worth confirming this at the materials selection stage rather than after manufacturing begins.

Melteca Finishes and Colours: What to Choose for Your Project
This is where most homeowners get overwhelmed — and understandably so. Melteca alone offers dozens of colours across six distinct finishes, plus a growing range of woodgrain options. Add in the Acrylic Panel range and the high-pressure laminates, and it can feel like a lot.
The key is to start with the finish before you choose the colour — because the finish determines the feel of the room, and the colour lives within that feeling. Here’s how each Melteca finish performs in real-world cabinetry.
Naturale — The Clean, Neutral Workhorse
Naturale is Melteca’s smooth matte finish with minimal texture and a warm visual effect. It’s the finish we recommend most often for clients who want a timeless, contemporary kitchen that won’t feel dated in five years. The smooth surface is easy to wipe down, handles Auckland’s variable humidity well, and works with both light and dark colour palettes.
Melteca’s “Tones of New Zealand” collection — including colours like Possum (a beautiful sage green), Chalk White, and Parchment — all work beautifully in Naturale. These are colours that read as considered and deliberate, not generic. We’ve used Possum Naturale in laundries and second kitchens across the North Shore to excellent effect — it pairs effortlessly with brushed brass tapware and a white benchtop.
Organic — Timber Look Without the Maintenance
Organic is Melteca’s newest and fastest-growing finish category, and it’s been genuinely impressive to work with. The Organic finish emulates the beauty and natural grain movement of real timber through a tactile, textured surface that looks and feels convincingly close to the real thing.
Colours like Danish Walnut Organic, Urban Ash Organic, and Vintage Walnut Organic are the ones we’re specifying most on kitchen renovations in Auckland’s inner suburbs right now. Homeowners in villas and bungalows — where the original character of the home leans toward natural materials — respond particularly well to these finishes. You get the warmth of timber cabinetry without the worry about swelling, checking, or the regular oiling that solid timber demands.
The typical approach we use: Organic woodgrain on lower cabinets and island, a lighter Melteca Naturale tone on uppers, and a coordinating Laminex laminate or stone benchtop. It’s a formula that photographs well, lives well, and doesn’t go out of style quickly.
“The Organic finish range has genuinely changed what’s achievable at a mid-range budget. A few years ago, that timber-look result required veneer — which costs more and demands more care. Melteca Organic gives clients the aesthetic they want at a price that makes sense.”
— Little Giant Interiors Design Team
Hi-Gloss — When You Want a Touch of Luxury
Melteca Hi-Gloss is exactly what it sounds like — a high-gloss, mirror-like finish that adds drama and perceived luxury to any cabinetry. It’s more durable and significantly more affordable than lacquer, making it the smart choice for clients who love that glossy, European-kitchen look but don’t want to pay lacquer pricing or accept lacquer’s fragility.
Hi-Gloss is best used strategically — on island fronts, on lower cabinets paired with matte uppers, or on a single accent run of cabinetry. Used on every surface in a small kitchen, it can feel overwhelming and every fingerprint shows. Used as a deliberate design choice, it’s stunning. We’ve installed Melteca Hi-Gloss in kitchens in Remuera and St Heliers where the client specifically wanted that sleek, high-contrast finish, and the result is genuinely striking.
💡 Design tip: If you love the look of Hi-Gloss but have young kids or a busy household, consider using it only on upper cabinets where hands don’t reach. Lower cabinets take the most wear and benefit from a more forgiving matte finish.
The Laminex Acrylic Panel — A Step Above Standard Melteca
If your budget stretches, the Laminex Acrylic Panel is worth serious consideration for door fronts. It’s a premium product with a velvety soft-touch matte finish, significantly better fingerprint resistance than standard Melteca, and a depth of colour that photographs beautifully and holds up over years of daily contact.
The colour palette is more curated — designed for homeowners who know what they want and are willing to pay for it. We’ve used Metallic Coal Matte from the Acrylic Panel range on kitchens in Ponsonby and Grey Lynn for clients who wanted something that felt genuinely architectural. It does exactly that.
| Product | Best For | Finish Options | Warranty | Relative Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Melteca Standard | Carcasses, door fronts, laundry, wardrobes | Naturale, Puregrain, Organic, Hi-Gloss + more | 7 years (Melteca) | $$ |
| Melteca Hi-Gloss | Feature cabinetry, island fronts, accent runs | High gloss mirror finish | 7 years (Melteca) | $$ |
| Laminex Acrylic Panel | Premium door fronts, kitchen & laundry | Soft-touch matte, fingerprint resistant | 10 years | $$$ |
| Laminex Laminate (HPL) | Benchtops, splashbacks, commercial surfaces | Wide range, coordinated with Melteca | 7 years | $$ |
| LGI Warranty (Installation) | All projects — workmanship & installation | — | 5 years + transferable | Included |
Laminex and Melteca in the Kitchen: What Works and What to Watch
The kitchen is the hardest-working room in the house, and the cabinetry takes the brunt of it. Splashes, steam, grease, UV light through windows, constant opening and closing — a kitchen cabinet surface needs to perform over a decade of daily use without showing it. This is exactly where Melteca’s durability track record in the NZ market makes it such a reliable specification.
Cabinet Carcasses — The Structural Foundation
Every cabinet in your kitchen has an outer visible surface and an inner structural layer. At Little Giant Interiors, we use Melteca-faced boards throughout — not just on the visible surfaces — because consistency in the substrate affects how accurately the carcasses are cut, edged, and assembled in our Auckland factory.
Our fully automatic German manufacturing equipment cuts and machines these boards with laser precision. Melteca’s dimensional consistency means those cuts are accurate to within a fraction of a millimetre — which matters when you’re assembling dozens of cabinets that need to align perfectly on a kitchen wall. Cheaper boards vary in thickness across a sheet, and that variation compounds through an installation.
Door Fronts — Where Your Colour and Finish Decision Is Most Visible
The door fronts are what you see and touch every day, so this is where the finish choice matters most. For standard kitchens — the majority of the Auckland renovations we complete — Melteca in a Naturale or Organic finish gives clients exactly what they want: a clean, tactile surface that’s easy to live with. For clients who want something that reads as genuinely premium, we discuss the Laminex Acrylic Panel range — and in most cases, once they see a sample in person, the decision makes itself.
Rail-style and shaker-style doors — which are consistently popular in Auckland’s older villas and bungalows — can also be achieved in Melteca. Laminex has specifically developed solutions that allow cabinetmakers to create shaker-inspired profiles using Melteca material, which opens up that classic look at a price point that previously required either painted MDF or solid timber.
Colour Palettes Trending in Auckland Kitchens Right Now
We’re seeing a clear direction in the kitchens we’re designing for clients across Ponsonby, Mt Eden, Takapuna, and Albany. The mainstream trend has shifted away from stark white-only kitchens toward two-tone combinations — a neutral or earthy lower cabinet paired with a lighter upper, often a warm white or cream. Melteca’s “Tones of New Zealand” collection has been well-timed for this shift, with colours like Possum (sage green), Mocassin (warm taupe), and Hushed Pine (a soft grey-green) feeling genuinely contemporary without being difficult to live with.
For bolder choices, Danish Walnut Organic on lower cabinets with Chalk White Naturale uppers is a pairing we come back to regularly — it’s warm, considered, and photographs beautifully for any client who wants to document their renovation on social media or through a real estate lens.
💡 Design tip: Order Laminex and Melteca physical samples before making your final colour decision — the way a finish reads under warm LED kitchen lighting versus natural daylight through a west-facing window can be surprisingly different. Our team can arrange samples for you at the design stage.

Laminex and Melteca in the Laundry and Wardrobe: Why It’s the Same Smart Choice
Melteca is designed for cabinetry and shelving across any interior application — and we use it on laundry renovations and wardrobe fitouts just as often as on kitchens. The same properties that make Melteca excellent in a kitchen — moisture resistance, colour consistency, durability, and NZ-made reliability — make it an equally strong choice for laundry cabinetry and wardrobe interiors.
The Laundry: Moisture Is the Primary Challenge
Laundries in Auckland homes are often underspaced, underlit, and subjected to more moisture than any other room in the house. Steam from drying, condensation from washing machines, and the general dampness of a room with poor ventilation all test cabinet surfaces harder than a kitchen ever does.
For laundry cabinetry, we always specify Melteca on a moisture-resistant (MR) substrate — either particleboard MR or Lakepine MDF MR. The standard substrate performs well in dry environments, but for laundry conditions, that moisture-resistant core is the right call. Laminex supplies Melteca bonded to both substrate types, so the product selection process at our factory accounts for the specific room and its conditions.
Colour-wise, laundries in Auckland tend to go one of two directions. Clients who want the laundry to feel like a considered part of the home (rather than an afterthought) often choose the same colour palette as their kitchen — a coordinated Melteca tone that connects the two spaces visually, even when they’re not adjacent. Alternatively, clients on a tighter laundry budget opt for a crisp Chalk White or Bright White Naturale on MR particleboard — clean, timeless, and easy to keep looking fresh.
Our laundry renovation Auckland service uses Melteca cabinetry as the default specification, and we always design the space to account for the workflow — where the washing machine sits, where folding happens, where cleaning products are stored — before choosing the surface. The material and the design have to work together.
Wardrobes: Where Melteca’s Colour Range Really Shines
Wardrobe fitouts are where clients often have the most fun with colour and finish — because wardrobes don’t have the functional constraints of a kitchen. There’s no steam, minimal moisture, no cooking grease. Melteca in a standard Naturale or Puregrain finish on a standard particleboard substrate is perfectly suited to wardrobes, and the full colour palette opens up for interior shelving, door fronts, and drawer faces.
We’ve been seeing a trend in Auckland wardrobes toward warmer, more considered interiors — moving away from the all-white walk-in wardrobe and toward a more styled space. Melteca’s Organic woodgrain finishes work beautifully in a wardrobe context: Danish Walnut or Urban Ash on open shelving and hanging rails gives a dressing room feel that’s genuinely different from what most people have.
For clients who want their wardrobe to feel like a considered space — not just storage — the combination of a feature Melteca Organic on the visible shelving and a coordinating Naturale on the carcass and drawer faces is a formula that consistently delivers.
💡 Design tip: Wardrobe interiors are generally lower-traffic surfaces than kitchen cabinets, which means you can use a wider range of Melteca finishes without worrying as much about wear. It’s a good opportunity to be bolder with colour or texture than you might feel comfortable doing in the kitchen.

How to Choose Between Melteca, Acrylic Panel, and Laminate for Your Project
The honest answer to “which Laminex product is right for me?” is that it depends on your room, your budget, and what you’re trying to achieve aesthetically. Here’s how we actually navigate this conversation with clients at the design stage of our 6-step design and build process.
Start With the Room and Its Conditions
Every material selection decision should start with the room’s specific demands — moisture levels, traffic intensity, UV exposure, and how much daily handling the surfaces will take. A kitchen island that gets touched thousands of times a week needs a different specification than a wardrobe interior that gets opened twice a day. A laundry in a damp North Shore home needs moisture-resistant substrate. A kitchen in a sun-facing Remuera home needs a surface that won’t fade under strong UV.
Melteca is formaldehyde-tested and certified for interior residential use across all of these scenarios. The substrate choice (standard particleboard, MR particleboard, standard MDF, or Lakepine MDF MR) is the variable we adjust for conditions — the surface performs consistently across all of them.
Match the Finish to Your Lifestyle, Not Just Your Aesthetic
There are clients who fall in love with Hi-Gloss in a showroom and then live to regret it when they’re wiping fingerprints off it three times a day. Be honest about your household — how many kids, how much cooking, how much time you’re willing to spend on maintenance — because the right finish for your lifestyle might be different from the most beautiful finish in isolation.
As a rough guide from our experience across hundreds of Auckland kitchen projects: busy family kitchens do best in Melteca Naturale or Organic. Smaller households or couples who cook infrequently can comfortably go Hi-Gloss or Acrylic Panel. Laundries always get moisture-resistant substrate regardless of finish. Wardrobes are the most forgiving application and can handle the full range.
Budget Honestly — and Build in a 10–15% Contingency
As a general principle across any renovation, we always recommend building in a 10–15% contingency on your cabinetry materials budget. Colour changes, substrate upgrades, additional cabinet runs discovered during design — these are normal parts of the process and are easier to handle when they’re not a surprise. The material cost difference between standard Melteca and the premium Acrylic Panel is meaningful, but it’s a fraction of the total project cost — and in most cases, clients who go for the upgrade don’t regret it.
Our team walks through every material option at the design stage of your project, so there are no surprises. You see the samples, understand the price difference, and make the call with full information. That’s how we’ve always worked, and it’s part of why our client reviews consistently highlight the transparency of our process.

Ready to See Laminex and Melteca Samples in Person?
Reading about surfaces online only gets you so far. The difference between how a Melteca Organic finish reads in a photograph versus how it feels in your hand — and how it looks under the specific lighting conditions of your home — is significant enough that we always recommend seeing physical samples before making your final materials decision.
As part of our design process, we bring the Laminex and Melteca sample range to your in-home consultation — or you can visit the Laminex showroom at Residium in Auckland to see their full range in large-format samples. Either way, the decision is always better made in context than from a screen.
If you’re planning a kitchen renovation in Auckland, a laundry fitout, or a custom wardrobe — and you want the benefit of a team that works with Laminex NZ products daily and can guide your materials selection from experience — the first step is a free in-home consultation with Little Giant Interiors. We’ll talk through your space, your budget, and your lifestyle, and we’ll have a clear materials recommendation before we leave your house.
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What is Laminex NZ?
Laminex NZ is New Zealand's leading decorative surface supplier. Their product portfolio covers cabinetry panels (Melteca), high-pressure laminates for benchtops and splashbacks, Acrylic Panels for premium door fronts, and timber veneer. They also distribute Caesarstone engineered stone. Melteca is their flagship cabinet panel product, manufactured in New Zealand for over 42 years and used by cabinetmakers across the country.
What is Melteca and is it the same as Laminex?
Melteca is a brand owned and distributed by Laminex NZ — so they're related but not identical. Melteca is a low-pressure melamine (LPM) decorative panel, manufactured in New Zealand, used primarily for cabinet carcasses and door fronts. Laminex also makes high-pressure laminates for benchtops and the premium Acrylic Panel range. When cabinetmakers in NZ talk about Melteca, they mean the melamine cabinet panel; when they say Laminex, they may be referring to the broader brand or specifically to the laminate benchtop product.
How long does Melteca last in a kitchen?
Melteca is backed by a 7-year warranty from Laminex NZ and is designed to comply with NZBC B2.3.1(c) durability requirements. In practice, properly installed Melteca cabinetry in a kitchen lasts well beyond 10 years when maintained according to Laminex's care guide. Little Giant Interiors also provides a 5-year workmanship and installation warranty, meaning your cabinetry is covered on multiple levels.
Is Melteca good for laundry cabinets in New Zealand?
Yes — Melteca is an excellent choice for laundry cabinetry when specified on a moisture-resistant (MR) substrate. Laminex produces Melteca bonded to both MR particleboard and MR MDF, which is what Little Giant Interiors specifies for laundry applications in Auckland homes. The decorative surface is easy to clean and highly durable in the damp conditions common in NZ laundries.
What is the difference between Melteca Naturale and Organic finish?
Melteca Naturale is a smooth, slightly warm matte finish — clean and contemporary, well suited to solid colours. Melteca Organic is a newer tactile finish that emulates the grain and natural movement of real timber. Organic is available in woodgrain colours like Danish Walnut, Urban Ash, and Vintage Walnut, and is ideal for clients who want the warmth of a timber aesthetic without the maintenance demands of real wood or veneer.
How much does Melteca cabinetry cost in NZ?
The cost of Melteca cabinetry in NZ varies based on the number of cabinets, the finish selected, and the complexity of the design. As a general guide, Melteca is a mid-range material — more affordable than lacquered or veneered cabinetry, and more durable than budget import boards. For a full kitchen renovation in Auckland, material costs are one component of the overall project investment. Little Giant Interiors provides a fixed-price contract after the design stage so you always know your total cost before manufacturing begins.
Can I get Melteca for my wardrobe fitout?
Yes — Melteca is used across a wide range of interior applications including wardrobe fitouts. It works beautifully for wardrobe carcasses, shelf systems, drawer fronts, and door panels. Wardrobes are a low-moisture, lower-traffic environment than kitchens, so the full range of Melteca finishes and colours is available, including the Organic woodgrain range for clients who want a more styled wardrobe interior.
What Laminex or Melteca colours are popular for Auckland kitchens in 2025?
The most popular Melteca combinations we're seeing across Auckland renovations in 2025 are two-tone kitchens — a warm woodgrain Organic finish on lower cabinets paired with a lighter Naturale tone on uppers. Popular specific colours include Danish Walnut Organic, Urban Ash Organic, Possum Naturale (sage green), Chalk White Naturale, and Mocassin Naturale. These sit within Melteca's Tones of New Zealand collection and reflect a move away from all-white kitchens toward warmer, more layered palettes.
Is Melteca environmentally friendly?
Melteca holds Environmental Choice New Zealand certification and is manufactured in Hamilton using FSC-certified timber from New Zealand forests. It is low in formaldehyde emissions, with Lakepine MDF substrate meeting E0 standard — the strictest formaldehyde classification. Melteca also supports the NZ Green Building Council's Green Star and Homestar rating tools, making it a credible choice for environmentally conscious renovations.
What is Laminex Acrylic Panel and is it worth the upgrade?
Laminex Acrylic Panel is a premium decorative panel with a smooth, velvety soft-touch matte finish and superior scratch and fingerprint resistance — a step above standard Melteca. It carries a 10-year warranty and is particularly well suited to kitchen and laundry door fronts where clients want a premium result. Whether it's worth the upgrade depends on budget and aesthetic priorities — for clients who want cabinetry that feels genuinely high-end, the Acrylic Panel range consistently delivers.
Does Little Giant Interiors use Laminex products?
Yes. Little Giant Interiors specifies Laminex NZ products — primarily Melteca melamine panels — on the majority of our Auckland kitchen, laundry, and wardrobe projects. We also specify Laminex Acrylic Panels for clients who want a premium door front finish. Laminex backs their products with a 10-year materials warranty, which sits alongside our own 5-year installation and workmanship warranty and transferable Little Giant Interiors guarantee.
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