Black and Ivory Kitchen with Antique Brick Arch
Contact: karalouise (My Page)
Posted on Sat, Nov 15, 08
Link to kitchen photos: http://s308.photobucket.com/albums/kk337/Karalouise703/finished%20kitchen/
Details:
- Cabinets: Shiloh cabinetry. The perimeter is Oxford painted maple in ivory with pewter glaze and the island is painted black with weathered, distressed, sand through.
- Countertop: 3 different granites - Red Dragon, Absolute Black and Black Mosaic Gold
- Cooktop: Jenn-Air from the new Pro-series line. It has a downdraft eliminating the need for a hood or worrying about one of those periscope draft thingies breaking! http://www.jennair.com/catalog/category.jsp?cat=12&N=56Purchased from http://www.bridgevilleappliance.com/
- Sink: copper
- Brick beams and columns
- Floor: Minwax dark walnut
Part of our remodel included a 400 sq. ft. addition to expand the size of our family room and kitchen. The biggest thorn in my side for this whole project was working around a dropped beam and 2 columns that had to stay because they were the structural support for an upstairs bay window. We have decided to arch out the structure and will be covering it in antiqued brick......this is my best hope at being able to (as another GWer said) "Embrace my beam"!!
Features:
Apron Sink
Bar with Seating
Beadboard
Counter-depth Frig
Exposed Stone/Brick
Island: Multilevel
Island with Seating
Lazy Susan
Lighting: Recessed
Lighting: Under Cabinet
Microwave Drawer
Trash Pullout
Walk-in Pantry
Finished kitchen - red, yellow, and blue

Contact: redrange (My Page)
Posted on Mon, Jun 18, 07
Links to kitchen photos:
Details:
- Cabinets: Ikea, painted by our housepainter, and much modified in configuration thanks to the IkeaFans website. They're Ikea Tidaholm. Our painter sanded them, put on a coat of grey z-prime, put on an undercoat of color (black for the blue cabinets, ochre/orange for the yellow), did the top coat of color (I don't know the specific names of the blue and yellow), sanded through the top coat to reveal bits of undercoat, and then topped it all off with a clear coat of some sort of varnish used on floors. It was labor intensive, but he kept saying how excited he was to be doing it because he got to be creative. The blue is a little darker in person.
- Range: Bluestar in Ruby Red
- Hood: Modern Aire in Ruby Red
- Counters: soapstone (two or three different types - our stone guy had extra slabs from previous jobs, so we did more stone countertop than originally planned)
- Butcher block counter: Ikea, beech
- Hardware: RK International
Tile backsplash: handpainted/glazed by me
- Mirror/iron thing behind stove: Victorian cast iron overmantel from a fireplace
- Pot racks: The Metal Peddler
- Fridge, DW: Jenn Air with custom copper panels
- Sinks: copper one from Handcrafted Metal; soapstone from Vermont Soapstone
- Faucets: Moen Aberdeen
- Floors: reclaimed/remilled VG fir from AltruWood (the wood used to be beams in the Pendleton Woolen Mills in Oregon, my home state), finished with OSMO Polyx Oil
- Shelves: brackets from VanDyke's, shelves in VG fir
- the paper towel holder is from Storables.
- The painting "Crow and Chickadee" is by Beth Sautter - add .com to her name and you'll get her website.
- The ModernAire hood is model PS1130, 54" wide and 30" tall, with chrome lip, rack, and bands. The 1400 CFM fan is on backorder, so I can't yet report on its performance.
The tall pantry is 15" wide and 80" tall (24" deep). We bought a couple extra interior drawers for it. It holds about 2/3 of our non-refrigerated food, including my ever-growing collection of oils and vinegars.
The copper panels were made by a sheet metal guy our GC knows. We gave him the schematics that came with the JennAir appliances and he figured out the best way to do the panels. Some of them have returns on the edges -- like the lid of a shoebox -- and some of them have filler (cardboard?) between the copper and the actual door.
The tiles were one of those things where you get yourself into a project without realizing the scope until it's too late. I wanted antique Dutch tiles, or even modern Dutch tiles that were painted, not printed, but there was no way they'd fit in the budget. So I went to a pottery supply store, bought bisque tiles, bought glazes, and went to work. The pottery supply place also fired the tiles for me, for way cheaper than any of the 'paint your own' pottery places. In the end, I not only did the kitchen backsplash but also wrote out some quotations in red glaze for the bathroom, and painted pictures of animals for the fireplace surround. In all, I painted over 300 tiles. It took me a year. :o Like I said, I didn't realize the scope when I first started out. On the bright side, each finished tile cost about a dollar, and it provided a hobby.