The Kitchen Reveal

Folks, I've been scolded for not posting for 11 days, so I've decided it's time for a big one: the kitchen reveal!

As anyone who crosses paths with me daily knows, this kitchen is the project that has occupied every spare minute (and more) of my summer and fall. In July, we left home for two weeks and kissed goodbye to this:

Kitchen before the renovation

Everything in the room went: the chalkboard wall, the IKEA wood countertops, the cheapo Home Depot cabinetry that was falling apart by the day, the Craigslist fridge with the icemaker that leaked all over the floor. Here it was after demolition.

Gutted kitchen

We hoped it would end up looking like this:

My kitchen moodboard.

My kitchen moodboard.

After months cooking in a temporary kitchen, weekends juggling toddlers and painting (which my husband graciously took on, as our budget was stretched to the max), and much cleanup, I'm giddy to finally call this place ours:

Self Styled - Kitchen Reveal

For cabinetry, we went with a shade I'll call putty—it's not grey, not white, not beige, not even greige. It changes with the light. The cabinetmaker, Candlelight, calls it Flagstone. I call it classic without being boring. The hardware, in a satin rose gold finish, is by Hickory Hardware

My favorite piece in the whole kitchen, besides our Capital Culinarian range, has to be the Vent-a-Hood range hood, a custom order. It was ungodly expensive. But it's a centerpiece, so we economized elsewhere, and and I'm so glad we did.

The fridge has a Sodastream built in. Bubblicious!

The fridge has a Sodastream built in. Bubblicious!

We chose white Imperial Danby marble for the countertops, because it reminds us of our favorite brasseries. I love how it looks with the Thonet chairs—they were so worth the wait.

Thonet counter stools

Behind the chairs, on the opposite wall from the range, you'll find our cabinet wall with in-cabinet lighting and seeded-glass panels on the topmost doors. 

We still have to fix a few of the installation dings, and the door is actually going to be replaced AGAIN in a few weeks because the manufacturer flubbed up the design. But you get the picture. 

We still have to fix a few of the installation dings, and the door is actually going to be replaced AGAIN in a few weeks because the manufacturer flubbed up the design. But you get the picture. 

The wall also includes two appliance garages, whose doors lift up and slide into the cabinets. One of these appliance garages is where we hide the microwave, because I hate looking at microwaves. The other one, to the left, houses a toaster and coffeemaker.

Outlets, marble countertops, and in-cabinet lighting make these stations easy to use.

Outlets, marble countertops, and in-cabinet lighting make these stations easy to use.

Because our kitchen is big but not HUGE, I wanted to preserve some sense of openness and not cover every wall with upper cabinets. I liked the look of some French train-style shelves from RH, but not the price tag or finish. After mulling some options at Anthropologie, I ended up getting some cast-iron brackets from House of Antique Hardware and had Dave craft wooden shelves to go on top. We finished the open shelves in Benjamin Moore paint, color-matched to the cabinetry. 

Crap, I just noticed the paint smudge on one of the brackets. Don't worry, I just ran over there and picked it off with my fingernail. #quickfix

Crap, I just noticed the paint smudge on one of the brackets. Don't worry, I just ran over there and picked it off with my fingernail. #quickfix

As an added detail, we put the same brackets underneath the island. 

Brackets under kitchen island

The sink is amazing. Ever since Dave was the designated dish washer at his college fraternity house, he's wanted a restaurant-style faucet sprayer, so we finally got one. The super-deep, squared-off sink was for both of us—we put a similar one in our previous home and loved that you can leave a few dirty pots in there and there and not have to look at them from across the kitchen.

The garbage disposal in here has bone-saw strength. Don't ask me why this was necessary, but Dave believes it was.

The garbage disposal in here has bone-saw strength. Don't ask me why this was necessary, but Dave believes it was.

Because we wanted the sink in front of the window but didn't want to shorten the opening and create an asymmetry on the exterior, we came up with the idea of putting an herb garden in the trench between the sink and the glass. It's super-convenient, both for cooking and because I never forget to water the herbs. Right now the cedar planter box (built by Dave) is propped up a bit higher than I'd like, so eventually I'll nest it down deeper so it doesn't block as much sunlight. 

The windows also still need to be painted a high-gloss black. In due time...

The windows also still need to be painted a high-gloss black. In due time...

Above the sink, you'll find my Frankenpendant. I loved the look of the luxe Sorenson pendant from Remains Lighting, so I created something similar by combining the Hood pendant and a caged globe shade from Rejuvenation. 

A little exposed-filament action. Rawr.

A little exposed-filament action. Rawr.

Now, the details. Functionality was key, so we incorporated lots of organizational solutions into our cabinetry, like cutting-board dividers, roll-out pantry shelves, and a spice rack for the upper cabinet nearest the stove. There's also a little tip-out compartment in each sink cabinet, where you can put sponges and the drain plug.

Cutting board cabinet
Roll-out pantry shelves
We call this cabinet "Flavor Town."

We call this cabinet "Flavor Town."

Sponge compartment

When we need extra light for meal prep, we can flip on the undercabinet lighting.

Undercabinet lighting

We designated a little bottom drawer for kids' dishes, so they can help set the table. It's really close to the adjacent dining room. 

Kids drawer

Dave is pretty obsessed with crown moldings, so we tied the crown and cove moldings into the cabinetry, combining several pieces so it's nearly identical to what you'll find on the rest of the first floor. While the original moldings in our house are plaster, we did these in wood and painted them a superflat white, which gives them the same chalky look as the plaster ones.

Moldings for days. (And for Dave.)

Moldings for days. (And for Dave.)

Finally, it wouldn't be our kitchen without a place of honor for this pic, which we bought from a random sidewalk vendor when visiting my parents in Naples, Italy, where they lived for several years. I believe the actor's name is Toto, and he was kind of a big deal. 

You can never have too much spaghetti.

You can never have too much spaghetti.

I think that's most of it... What do you think? What detail do you like best, and what would drive you nuts about this design?

Obsessed With… Bits of Brass + Lots of Black

Leave it to me to obsess over the details no one else notices. I was reading Lonny’s great roundup of unexpected color combinations, and instead of swooning over the legitimately pretty topic at hand, the pairing of deep navy and lovely trench-coat camel, I instead focused in on this:

Source: Lonny. Originally featured in this home tour, a project designed by Marianne Brown of White & Gold.

Source: Lonny. Originally featured in this home tour, a project designed by Marianne Brown of White & Gold.

That sconce! The timeless shape. The pairing of two totally classic materials that somehow seems totally current, too.  I suspected Visual Comfort as the lighting source, which a quick Google image search (string: black and brass sconce with shade) confirmed. It’s the Elkins Sconce, part of the brand’s glamorous yet masculine Thomas O’Brien Lighting collection.

Source: Neena's Lighting

Source: Neena's Lighting

The more I stared at it, the more I realized how much I’m drawn to the combination of flattish black and hints of gleaming gold. Sure, black and brass decor have been trending for some time, but usually the pairing is all flashy and glam—very bombshell. The pieces I’m drawn to are more French-Neoclassical-eclectic and even faintly stodgy.

Take, for example, this ram’s head table on Chairish that I’ve viewed 70 times and which is now following me via cookies on every device I own:

Source: Chairish. Don’t you DARE buy this before I come up with a spare $450. I will FIND YOU.

Source: Chairish. Don’t you DARE buy this before I come up with a spare $450. I will FIND YOU.

The combination of finishes paired with the kooky ram detail is so crazy-old-rich-lady, isn’t it? I have to have it.

Now, see how much it echoes this desk I fell for a few years ago at High Point Market (and that I stop by to touch on every subsequent trip):

Source: Van Thiel & Co. desk via Kathy Kuo Home

Source: Van Thiel & Co. desk via Kathy Kuo Home

I find the whole look very reminiscent of Maison Jansen, the famed Paris design firm known for combining Empire and Neoclassical styling with a bit of modern glamour and Asian flair. 

Ready for more? Check out these half-dozen finds. And remember, that ram’s head table is MINE.

1. Mary McDonald Annika table lamp, $429, Wayfair. 2. Paragon round wall mirror, $220, Wayfair. 3. Lacourte ebony side table, $895, Williams-Sonoma Home. 4. Maison Jansen black lacquer table, price on request, 1stdibs. 5. Pair of Maison Jansen sconc…

1. Mary McDonald Annika table lamp, $429, Wayfair. 2. Paragon round wall mirror, $220, Wayfair. 3. Lacourte ebony side table, $895, Williams-Sonoma Home. 4. Maison Jansen black lacquer table, price on request, 1stdibs. 5. Pair of Maison Jansen sconces, $3,950, 1stdibs. 6. Billy Haines faux bamboo table, $3,240, Chairish.

Featured! My 2015 Home Trends on The Nest

As if going to High Point Market, the world's largest home decor showcase, last month wasn't treat enough, my trend report from the event was featured on the Nest's blog today. From tribal textiles to the next it shades, see what's making home-decor headlines right here. [Aside: That blue sofa!]

Link: http://blog.thenest.com/2015/10/30/home-decor-trends-high-point-market/

One of my 2015 market trends: Copper! 

One of my 2015 market trends: Copper! 

New Life for an Old Chandelier

I love auctions. Well, I love the idea of auctions. Every so often I’ll preview the wares at the upcoming Skinner events in Boston, and I’ll make tentative plans to go bid on antique rugs and other storied items I discover there. In reality, the likelihood of me hiring a babysitter to watch the kids on a weekend so I can go raise my paddle for an antique Bergere chair—oh, and the likelihood of me having, say, $1K extra cash laying around to spend on a whim—is next to zero.

Luckily, I know people who actually do go to auctions. Which is how I became the proud owner of this brass-and-crystal chandelier, purchased by my neighbor Rosann at Northeast Auctions in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. She stopped me on the sidewalk one day and asked if I needed a chandelier. “I bought this thing and have no idea where I can put it,” she explained. “My husband told me, ‘I don’t know why you keep buying these things—there’s nowhere for them to go!’”

My inherited fixture. Source: Northeast Auctions 

My inherited fixture. Source: Northeast Auctions 

I went to check it out at her home a few weeks later. Dusty and crammed in a box, it was definitely in need of some TLC. But the size, shape, and (imagined) sparkle were just right.

It sat in that box under my desk for another year, getting dustier by the day. But now that our kitchen renovation is well underway, I had good reason to finally clean and hang the fixture: I needed to swap it in for a pendant in my hallway, because I was moving that pendant to the new first-floor powder room.

The basket of the chandelier before cleaning.

The basket of the chandelier before cleaning.

It turns out there are two methods for cleaning a chandelier—removing all the parts and reassembling it, or cleaning the parts while they’re still hanging on the fixture. While the ex-Martha-employee in me felt compelled (for two seconds) to go whole-hog and disassemble it, the same part of my brain that compels me to turn any recipe into a one-pot meal won out. I also considered using a diluted ammonia solution for cleaning, but found that plain water and light scrubbing made the crystals sparkle just fine. I also opted not to polish the brass frame, as I rather liked the patina it had developed over the years. 

Armed with a damp rag and a 4-year-old daughter who was more than happy to sort the mixed bag of loose crystals into “piles of diamonds” for me, I set to work. I placed the top half of the chandelier on a small basket, both for support and to allow me to get underneath the fixture with a rag. 

One by one, I worked my way down the long upper strands and around the outer crown of larger prisms. I quickly realized that the terrycloth rag I was using was a bad choice; the loops of the towel kept snagging on the brass connectors. I switched to a damp scrap of an old T-shirt and continued. 

A few of the strands and crystals had broken, and a few of the brass connectors had snapped, so I set those aside as I worked. I combined a few partial strands, loose crystals, and intact connectors together to make complete chains, figuring I could fill the complete gaps with replacement strands.

The cleaned upper portion of the chandelier, resting on top of a basket of Magna-Tiles, of course. (Best toy ever!)

The cleaned upper portion of the chandelier, resting on top of a basket of Magna-Tiles, of course. (Best toy ever!)

The lower portion of the chandelier, the basket of hanging prisms, posed another challenge: How to clean underneath without hanging the fixture from great heights. After several misguided attempts to hang it from a stair railing with rope and slicing my hand on a broken crystal, I came up with a better solution: strapping it to the underside of a Lucite chair with the removable strap of a handbag. By knotting the strap, I was able to get the basket of crystals to hang a few inches off the ground, and the Lucite seat allowed enough light in that I could work without a flashlight. Bingo.  

One by one I wiped down the dangling prisms, adding any broken ones I found to my daughter’s “diamond pile.” Those would need to get replaced. Check out the difference between the cleaned crystals on the left and the and dirty ones on the right:

Cleaning the crystals
The basket of the chandelier after cleaning. You can see my jury-rigged chair setup here as well. 

The basket of the chandelier after cleaning. You can see my jury-rigged chair setup here as well. 

On to replacement parts. I ordered inexpensive chains of octagonal crystals and a handful of dangling strass crystals from chandelierparts.com. They came in about a week, and I added them to the missing gaps. I used brass wire from the craft store to attach the ball prism to a short length of chain.

Replacement parts. 

Replacement parts. 

 Finally it was ready to install. First, we had our electricians remove this pendant from the hallway and place it in our new powder room, which we added when we built the new kitchen...

Pendant by Arteriors in its new home.

Pendant by Arteriors in its new home.

...at which point I began harassing Dave daily about hanging my restoration project in the second-floor hall. I had to sit tight for a week, but it finally went up last night. Dave had to A) stand precariously on a ladder above a 2-floor drop, B) try not to get electrocuted, and C) try not to drop the top half of the chandelier, which was a bit terrifying. My only contribution was sitting on the above staircase and guiding the basket onto the frame once he had the top half set. But LOOK HOW AWESOME IT IS!

Bling bling bling bling bling. 

Bling bling bling bling bling. 

Not bad for a hand-me down, eh? I'm enchanted. It sparkles like crazy. The ball prism hangs quite a bit lower than in the auction photo now, but since the chandelier is just a hair undersized for the space, I like the increased length.

Now, to find a chandelier for the bedroom, so I can move that fixture to the new family room. Any favorite (non-auction) sources for vintage? Do tell...

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