Even though nothing was changed in regard to expanding walls and the enclosure of a porch to make a pantry, the whole room seems twice as large. Moving and enlarging one window, the addition of a glass paneled door and opening up the ceiling changed everything.
The window over the sink was shifted a couple of feet toward the view and is a bit larger than the old one.
The only thing left to add is a movable kitchen island. I'm ping-ponging between a wooden cart type one and an industrial-look stainless steel.
So, you've already seen the business end of the kitchen--the working area was shifted away from the front and side view area. The previous work plan had me running up and down the long cabinet line. The new work area is now a rather tight triangle from the sink to the stove to the refrigerator at the back of the room.
The new pantry is around the corner where the refrigerator is now located.
The window over the sink was shifted a couple of feet toward the view and is a bit larger than the old one.
The old overhead cabinet and Norwegian "cooler" were done away with and a new door with a very large glass panel opens up the view down the shoreline.
The cabinets are lacquer finish ivory white, the countertops and backsplash are soapstone. All the outlets over the cabinets are framed in black so they seem to disappear into the stone.
The old view to the east and the new one with the shortened cabinet and new door. We also placed a smaller table with some English elm chairs at the window.
There was not question that I wanted a solid surface behind the stove and work areas. None of that fiddly postage stamp tile for me! What are they thinking? Imagine what a cleaning nightmare they must be. I hope that fad dies a fast and hideous death!
Besides, when you buy stone, you get it by the slab, so why not use it all? (More about stone countertops in a later post.)
We relocated and widened the narrow doorway. So, even though the kitchen is still a separate room, it seems to link with the living room better.
The wider doorway has brightened and opened up that end of the living room as well as the kitchen.
The old cabinets were replaced with two tall Restoration Hardware French door cabinets. They are oak and have wonderful hardware.
The old cabinets were replaced with two tall Restoration Hardware French door cabinets. They are oak and have wonderful hardware.
They hold as much or more than the old cabinets. The cabinets were 1 3/4 inches too tall, so the wonderful carpenters trimmed up the bases and they just fit under the curve of the ceiling.
Both cabinets are fastened to the wall and added quarter round anchoring strips finish the bases off nicely. I mixed up some acrylic paint and matched the cabinet finish adding a thin black line between the wood and the flooring.
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