Ravinte 30 Pack | 5 Inch Cabinet Pulls Matte Black Stainless Steel Kitchen Drawer Pulls Cabinet Handles 5 InchLength, 3 Inch Hole Center

30 Pack | 5 Inch Cabinet Pulls Matte Black Stainless Steel Kitchen Drawer Pulls Cabinet Handles 5 InchLength, 3 Inch Hole Center

Features

  • 365-Day Evaluation: We believe you'll find value in your Ravinte handles. Use them for a full year, and if they don't meet your needs, we're here to help
  • MODERN: Functional & elegant, These matte black pulls suitable for different styles of cabinets, wardrobe, chest and cupboard
  • Enduring & STRONG: 30 bar pulls made of stainless steel finished with classic matte black coordinates well with other appliances and accessoriess
  • Simple look: The black cabinet handles have a wide appeal across a range of kitchen cabinet doors and drawers The matte black handles have a clean and timeless look that works with farmhouse, vintage, traditional and transitional styles
  • MEASUREMENT: Hole centers(CC):3 Inch(76mm), Total Length:5 inch(127mm), Diameter:1/2 inch(12mm) Projection:1-1/4 inch(32mm)

Specifications

Color Black
Size Matte Black 5'' Length(3'' Hole Center)
Unit Count 30

Thirty matte-black stainless steel cabinet pulls intended for drawers, cabinet doors, wardrobes and cupboards, each with a 5-inch total length and a 3-inch (76 mm) hole center. The bar-style pulls have a 1/2-inch (12 mm) diameter and 1-1/4-inch (32 mm) projection and are finished in matte black.

Model Number: B07SPXKNXN

Ravinte 30 Pack | 5 Inch Cabinet Pulls Matte Black Stainless Steel Kitchen Drawer Pulls Cabinet Handles 5 InchLength, 3 Inch Hole Center Review

4.7 out of 5

A hardware swap is one of my favorite weekend projects, and these Ravinte pulls delivered exactly the kind of clean, modern refresh I was after. I installed a 30-pack across a small kitchen and a bathroom vanity, replacing a mishmash of knobs and dated handles. The result: a cohesive, matte-black look that feels current without shouting for attention.

Design and build

These are bar-style pulls with a 5-inch overall length and a 3-inch (76 mm) center-to-center spacing. The bar diameter is 1/2 inch (12 mm), and the projection is 1-1/4 inch (32 mm). That combination hits a sweet spot: the handles look substantial on standard cabinet doors and drawers without overwhelming them, and they’re proportionate on most 18–24-inch drawer fronts.

Construction is stainless steel with a matte black finish. The bars are hollow (as most budget pulls are), but the posts feel well-secured and the pulls don’t flex when you tug on them. Across the 30 pieces I installed, hole spacing was consistent and the threads took the machine screws smoothly. No cross-threading, no oddball outliers.

Fit and finish were better than the price would suggest. The matte coating was uniform, with only the faintest variation visible under raking light. Ends are neatly cut with a slight bevel, and there weren’t burrs or sharp edges to catch a sleeve.

Finish and aesthetics

Matte black is popular for a reason: it pairs well with both painted cabinets and wood tones, and it plays nicely with stainless or black appliances. On my light-gray shaker cabinets, the pulls add crisp contrast without the glare you get from polished chrome. On an oak vanity, they read as a calm, modernizing note rather than a trend-forward statement.

Matte surfaces can show dust; these are no exception. The upside is that they’re more forgiving of fingerprints than satin nickel or polished finishes. A quick wipe with a microfiber cloth brings them back to a uniform, velvety black. After months of daily use—wet hands in the kitchen, cleaner overspray, and the occasional belt buckle bump—mine show no flaking, chipping, or obvious wear. If you do manage a scratch, it will read lighter against the black, so a gentle hand when cleaning with abrasives is wise.

Ergonomics

The 12 mm diameter is comfortable, allowing a secure three-finger grip even for larger hands. With a 32 mm projection, there’s enough knuckle clearance to avoid brushing the cabinet face, which is especially appreciated on thicker shaker rails. I used them on both doors and 24-inch-wide drawers; opening fully loaded drawers felt secure and controlled.

Installation experience

These installed quickly and cleanly. A few practical notes from my bench:

  • Use a hardware jig or make a simple template from scrap to keep the 3-inch center-to-center spacing dead-on across doors and drawers. With bar pulls, symmetry is what sells the look.
  • Drill straight pilot holes and lightly chamfer the entry with a countersink to avoid raised fibers on painted wood.
  • Avoid over-tightening. Because the bars are hollow, cranking down can deform the posts or strip the threads. Snug and stop is the rule.
  • Two screw lengths were included in my box, which covered all but my thickest drawer fronts. If you have beefy, 1-inch-plus drawer boxes with applied fronts, you may need longer machine screws.

Every pull seated flush to the surface with no rocking, and the posts covered the holes cleanly. I didn’t run into misaligned threading or wobbly posts, which can plague budget hardware.

Durability and daily use

So far, the finish is holding up. The matte coating has resisted the micro-scratches that quickly dull cheaper coatings, and the stainless base helps with corrosion resistance in humid rooms. Doors opened thousands of times later, there’s no loosening at the posts. On one frequently used drawer, I did snug the screws after a few weeks—common with new hardware settling on painted surfaces—but they’ve stayed tight since.

Because these are hollow, they won’t have the “heft” of solid brass pulls. If that weighty, luxury feel matters to you, these won’t scratch that itch. Functionally, though, they’ve been solid performers.

Sizing, proportion, and where they fit best

A 5-inch overall length (3-inch hole spacing) is a classic size for standard upper and lower cabinet doors and for small to medium drawers. On wide drawers—30 to 36 inches—a longer pull often looks and feels better. If your kitchen has a lot of broad drawers, consider mixing sizes or using two pulls per drawer for balance. For narrow top drawers, this size feels just right and doesn’t crowd neighboring fronts.

Visually, the straight bar design is a chameleon. I’ve used them on Shaker, slab, and even raised-panel doors; in each case, they read as intentionally modern but not aggressively so. They bridge farmhouse, transitional, and modern spaces without fuss.

Value

This 30-pack is where the value really shows up. Outfitting a whole kitchen can get expensive fast, and these come in at a fraction of what I’d pay for comparable looks at a big-box store. The trade-offs—hollow construction, simple welds—are sensible at this price. What matters most (uniform finish, consistent sizing, and no-fuss installation) is all there.

I also appreciate the generous 365-day evaluation window from the manufacturer. Hardware is tactile; you don’t really know if a style or finish is right until you live with it. Having a year to make that judgment lowers the risk.

Tips and small gotchas

  • If you’re covering old knob holes, a single pull won’t hide the original hole unless it lines up with the new pattern. Plan for filling and repainting or choose backplates.
  • For painted cabinets, use a hand screwdriver for final tightening. It’s easier to feel when you’re snug enough without chewing through paint or compressing wood fibers.
  • Keep a couple of spare pulls in a kitchen junk drawer. If one ever gets dinged during a move or a remodel, swapping it is quick.

Who they’re for

  • Homeowners looking to update a whole room on a budget
  • DIYers who want straightforward, repeatable installation
  • Rentals and flips where consistent, modern hardware makes a big visual impact at low cost

Who might look elsewhere: those seeking the dense, upscale feel of solid brass or those needing longer pulls for a kitchen dominated by wide drawer banks.

Recommendation

I recommend these Ravinte pulls for anyone wanting a clean, modern update at a sensible price. They’re consistent, comfortable to use, easy to install, and the matte black finish holds up better than I expected for this category. As long as you’re okay with hollow stainless construction and the 3-inch hole spacing suits your layout, they’re a smart, low-risk way to make a noticeable improvement across a kitchen, bath, or laundry room.



Project Ideas

Business

Furniture Flip Business

Buy inexpensive dressers, nightstands and cabinets, perform light restoration (paint, sand, replace hardware with these matte-black pulls), and resell at a 2–4x margin. Promote quick turnaround builds that emphasize modern hardware upgrades. Use the 30-pack to update multiple small pieces per sourcing trip to maximize ROI.


DIY Hardware Kits with Tutorials

Assemble and sell makeover kits that include a set number of pulls, matching screws, a drilling/placement template, sandpaper and a downloadable how-to video. Offer tiered kits (starter, room refresh, whole-home) and upsell video consultations or color-matching advice. Market on Etsy, Shopify and social channels with before/after images.


Short-Run Contracting for Hosts

Offer a fast-refresh package to Airbnb hosts and property managers: replace outdated hardware across kitchens and bathrooms using bulk packs of these pulls, touch-up paint, and staging tips to increase perceived value and nightly rates. Charge per-room or per-unit flat fees and promise 24–48 hour turnaround for quick occupancy.


Wholesale Bundles for Makers and Contractors

Buy the handles in bulk and repackage into trade-sized bundles for local carpenters, cabinet shops and furniture makers. Offer custom labeling, volume discounts, and JIT delivery for remodelers. Highlight product durability and year-long evaluation guarantee to reduce buyer friction.


Hands-On Workshop Series

Host paid workshops teaching participants to build a coat rack, mug wall or small shelving unit using the matte black pulls. Price per attendee should cover a kit (one or two pulls per project), space rental and instructor time. Partner with maker spaces, hardware stores or coffee shops for recurring classes and sell finished items on-site.

Creative

Reclaimed Wood Coat Rack

Mount 4–6 matte black pulls on a sanded, stained or painted reclaimed wood board to create a modern coat rack or entryway organizer. Use the 1/4-inch projection to hang coats, bags and scarves. Add a small shelf above the pulls for keys and mail. This is an easy weekend build that pairs well with farmhouse or industrial décor.


Modular Towel Rail Set

Create a modular towel rail for bathrooms or kitchens by mounting two or three pulls horizontally on a slim wooden or metal bar. The 5-inch length and 1/2-inch diameter make a clean modern look for hand towels. Design variations: single long rail, stepped rails for layered towels, or a corner-mounted L-rail using two pulls on short blocks.


Jewelry and Mug Display Grid

Turn a framed pegboard or painted plywood into a stylish display by spacing pulls in a grid pattern to hold mugs, necklaces and scarves. The matte black finish creates contrast against light backgrounds and the 1-1/4-inch projection is perfect for hanging multiple items without clutter. Great for craft rooms, kitchens or retail pop-ups.


Geometric Chandelier Frame

Build a small industrial chandelier or pendant by using pulls as connection pieces for a geometric metal or wooden frame. Secure pulls at nodes to act as both structural connectors and decorative elements. Thread simple Edison bulbs or a string of LEDs through the frame for a custom lighting statement that contrasts matte black hardware with warm light.


Furniture Makeover Pack

Use the 30-pack to overhaul several small pieces from thrift stores: nightstands, dressers and cabinets. Swap old hardware for the matte black pulls, paint or distress surfaces, and reattach with included screws. Create a before-and-after portfolio to document transformations and inspire repeat projects.