78 inches tall. Cream white. Tempered glass door. 423mm wide.
This cabinet wasn’t designed for big houses.
It was designed for people who count every inch. Tiny homes under 300 square feet. Studio apartments where the living room is also the bedroom. A reading nook that’s just half a wall next to the couch. Try fitting a standard 500mm-wide display cabinet in any of those, and you’re sidestepping around it just to cross the room.
What does 423mm wide actually mean? Not much wider than a sheet of A3 paper. But at 78 inches tall, it runs floor to ceiling. Every shelf is storage you didn’t have before. What you save in width, you gain back in height.
Three things that go wrong when small spaces meet display cabinets
First, it’s too big to fit. Most display cabinets on the market start at 500mm wide. In a small apartment, one of those eats half a wall and suffocates the room. At 423mm, this cabinet sits flush against the wall — about the same depth as a thick bookshelf. No blocked walkways. No blocked light.

Second, it looks heavy and makes the room feel smaller. Dark wood cabinets in tight spaces act like walls. Cream white plus glass doors flips that logic — light colors reflect, glass transmits light, and visually the room doesn’t shrink. Not a design trick. Just physics. Light bounces. Glass lets light through.
Third, you can’t have both display and storage. The worst thing in a small space is a cabinet that’s “display only” — takes up room but you can’t use it for real life. This one handles both. Bottom shelves hold books and everyday clutter. Middle shelves are for collectibles and display pieces. Top shelf for the decorative stuff. 78 inches of height means you can layer it. It’s not a single-shelf accent piece.
Tall Cream White Display Cabinet 78 Inch Core Specifications
| Item | Specification |
|---|---|
| Model | HN-DC2000 |
| Overall dimensions | H78.7 × W16.7 × D13.8 inches (H2000 × W423 × D350mm) |
| Cabinet body | Cold rolled steel, 0.8mm thickness |
| Surface finish | Electrostatic powder coat, Cream White RAL 9001 |
| Door material | Tempered glass, 5mm thickness |
| Structure | KD flat pack, knocked-down assembly |
| Lighting | Optional warm LED strip, 3000K |
| Assembly | Single person, 40-60 minutes, illustrated English instructions included |
Why steel makes more sense than wood in small spaces
Not every situation demands a steel cabinet. But small spaces are a special case. The room is tight. Furniture gets moved around more. Cabinets sit flush against walls with zero airflow behind them. Wood fails fastest under these conditions.

Push a wooden cabinet flat against the wall, and the back panel gets no ventilation. In humid climates or coastal cities, you’ll see laminate bubbling within six months. Cold rolled steel doesn’t absorb moisture. No swelling, no warping. That’s not a claim — it’s how the material behaves.
And people in small spaces move more often. Disassemble a wood cabinet twice, and the screw holes widen, the panels shift, the doors stop lining up. Steel KD cabinets are different. Screws thread into steel, not particle board. Reassemble and tighten — the structure holds. Steel doesn’t creep. It doesn’t “eat” screws the way MDF does after repeated assembly cycles.
Where this cabinet fits
Tiny Home / Micro Living: Under 300 square feet, every piece of furniture needs to do double duty. This cabinet is display and storage in one. At 78 inches tall, it maxes out vertical space. Place it by the entry — top shelf for keys and hats, middle for display pieces, bottom for shoes.
Reading Nook: That half-wall next to the couch. A 423mm-wide cabinet fits right in. Top shelves for books, middle for plants and décor, bottom for blankets and odds and ends. Same depth as a bookshelf, same clean sightline.
Studio Apartment: Open-plan with no walls to divide space. The last thing you want is a bulky cabinet chopping up the room. This one’s narrow and tall enough to work as a room divider — place it back-to-back with the sofa, display side facing out, back side defining the space.
Small Entryway: 423mm slides into the entry without blocking the door. Top shelf for guest-facing décor, middle for keys and daily items, bottom for shoes and umbrellas.
Export loading details
20GP container: 120-140 units. 40HQ: 260-300 units. KD flat pack. Single unit packed dimensions approximately H82.7 × W17.7 × D3.1 inches.
- Steel panels: bubble wrap + corner protectors + 5-ply corrugated carton
- Tempered glass door: individual EPE foam + wooden crate securing
- Hardware pack: separate box with assembly instructions
Who this cabinet sells to
| Buyer Type | Why They Buy This |
|---|---|
| Tiny Home Brands | 423mm wide is the sweet spot for tiny homes. 78 inches tall utilizes every vertical inch. Cream white plus glass matches Scandinavian and Japanese tiny home aesthetics. |
| Small Space DTC Brands | You’re selling “living well in less space.” This cabinet is the hardware behind that promise — narrow, tall, good-looking, and actually holds stuff. |
| Interior Design Firms (compact projects) | 423mm width fits into most floor plan edge cases. Steel delivers faster than custom wood — no waiting on bespoke joinery. |

Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is 423mm wide enough? Can the shelves hold real weight?
Yes. At 78 inches tall, you get 5-6 adjustable shelves. Each shelf handles books, décor pieces, and everyday items without issue. Not every display cabinet needs to be 500mm wide. 423mm is a size optimized for small spaces on purpose.
Q: What’s the difference between cream white and plain white?
Plain white reads cold — put it in a small room and it feels clinical. Cream white has a subtle warmth to it. RAL 9001, matte powder coat finish. Pairs naturally with wood floors and light walls. It’s not beige. It’s not ivory. It’s cream white.
Q: Is the glass door safe? I have kids.
Tempered glass — 4 to 5 times stronger than regular glass. In the unlikely event it breaks, it shatters into blunt granules, not sharp shards. Meets EU and US glass safety standards. The door handle is recessed, not protruding. No catching on clothes, no bumping heads.
Q: How many people does assembly require?
One person. KD structure, illustrated English instructions included, all screws and hardware provided. No power drill needed. First time takes about 40-60 minutes. After that, under 30.
Q: Can I customize the size or color?
Yes. This is our standard model, but dimensions, color, and configuration are all customizable. Need 7 feet instead of 6.5? Need a lock added? Send us the specs.
Bottom line
423mm wide. 78 inches tall. Cream white and tempered glass. A display and storage cabinet built for small spaces — not a big-house afterthought crammed into a corner. Steel won’t warp. Flat pack ships clean. Narrow enough for a reading nook or entryway. Your customers live small. They don’t have to settle.