I have one project that was published a few years ago and again recently reprinted. After seeing Linda's post HERE at Lime in the Coconut blog about her bathrooms being published by the same magazine, it reminded me about my project. (Nice bathroom, by the way! You should check it out.)
After several years I still get calls and e-mails from all over the country with people asking me specifics about the finishes and telling me that they have these exact oak cabinets. Most recently about a month ago, someone from Anchorage, Alaska was interested in the slate floor. I forwarded her the info on my supplier and they both tried to work out various ways to ship it as cheaply as possible from Houston to Alaska. It was terribly expensive to ship that far and luckily she found something similar in her area. I thought it just goes to show you how much people sometimes want to make the best of what they have and well, really aren't interested in a white kitchen. I know, as much we all love a white kitchen here on the blogs...
not everyone wants one.
not everyone wants one.
This project had miles of oak cabinetry. The homeowner didn't want to paint them or change them all out for various reasons. They liked a refined rustic/craftsman style look and love natural materials. The challenge became how to make those builder standard oak cabinets look good.
Before
Items that had to go: oak floors (too much oak, they wanted something more durable, and it didn't match the other oak flooring in the adjacent dining room), off-white counters, busy, dated wallpaper, dated light box, backsplash, white refrigerator, oddly shaped island.
Before
After
By pairing the oak with a dark color, the green in this instance, it became a two tone kitchen. We created contrast and the green was a rich accent to the oak. Notice all the elements we added, countertops, backsplash, and new cabinetry were that dark green color. The light color in the space became the oak or oak color. The dark color is the green. When you tie several different elements in a space together with color and value, you make a stronger statement. The slate floor mixed those two colors together beautifully. That slate is call Imperial Sunset from Thorntree here in Houston.
After
I'm not a fan of making do with outdated materials and old features unless it can be done well and there are valid reasons for keeping them when you remodel. I do think however that this project has a timelessness about it, that the new and old blend really well, and I have to say....those oak cabinets never looked so good!
All before and after photos from my website
Thank you Better Homes and Gardens, for publishing this project again. It definitely hit home with a lot of people.
If you have a design related question or need some advice on any aspect of interior design, e-mail me HERE. I might feature your question in a special Q and A blog post!
If you have a design related question or need some advice on any aspect of interior design, e-mail me HERE. I might feature your question in a special Q and A blog post!
Simple and gorgeous!! I love it.
ReplyDeleteLove this integration.
ReplyDeleteI think your an artist--a true craftsman to get this look.
ReplyDeleteWant to know what kind of backsplash and also what is the granite. . .or where I can find out the info. Thx
ReplyDeleteWhere did you find the Island in this picture?
ReplyDeleteIt’s lovely. Thanks for sharing this post.
ReplyDeleteRemodel Kitchen Cabinets
Kitchen Design Cabinets
BEAUTIFUL!!! could you please tell me the green cabinet paint color and manufacturer
ReplyDelete