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Archive for January, 2010

More Cabinet Trends for 2010

Friday, January 29th, 2010

You don’t want to be a slave to your kitchen. In looking at more trends for 2010, I noticed that while going green (choosing sustainable cabinet and counter-top materials) will be a popular trend, people appear more interested in keeping their cabinets and kitchen space organized and compact. That means no hunting around for a half hour in your kitchen cabinets, drawers, or pantry for the lost tureen Aunt Doris gave you for your wedding a decade ago.

Cabinet styles may include upward mobility—not in terms of cash investment, but in the use of stack-able or extended pedestal cabinet units that rise some 42 inches or more. The top shelf, of course, is reserved for Aunt Doris’ tureen and the vegetable chopper you bought at the state fair but never use. The lower drawers are for everyday utensils or china.

For those looking at a cabinet refacing project, there are green materials that can look great if you match them to the décor—or redo the décor entirely to suit the materials. Wheat-board and bamboo cabinet facings can make solid options as sustainable choices.

Trends Toward Furniture-grade Woods

Consumers seem to be interested in high-performance cabinet accessories, such as pull-down shelving and roll-away waste cans. For those willing to spend the money, furniture-grade wood for cabinets or even facings can finish up a room smartly.

More exotic woods like Canadian red birch, knotty chestnut, or French white oak make for unique tones and grain patterns that can set your décor apart from the ordinary. Heavily distressed finishes and treatments are trending downward in favor of lighter colors that make the kitchen feel expansive, light, and functional.

A Quick Fix with New Hardware

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

If you’re looking for an economical, fast transformation of your cabinets and décor, consider replacing worn or outdated hardware. That includes kitchen cabinet pulls, knobs, hinges, backplates, hooks, or locks. Most everyone can complete this job in quick order, and there’s no reason why you can’t find cabinet hardware in your price range.

The steps for replacing cabinet hardware are straightforward:

  1. Inventory every item in the hardware that you intend on replacing. This means counting up the total number of cabinets, door faces, and drawers; then multiply the number for each against the part you’re replacing for total count.  Hint: Buy a few extras.
  2. Remove the fastening screws or bolts for each type piece and measure the distance between the screw or bolt holes in a two-screw system.
  3. Remove all escutcheons or plates behind the pulls or handles. Hint: Take parts with you when you shop for hardware and hold them next to replacements.
  4. Clean old screw holes to help install the new parts. Or, if you are replacing your hardware with pulls, plates, or knobs with different dimensions, fill your screw holes with wood putty.
  5. Drill out new holes as necessary, using your replacement hardware to make a template.
  6. Install and enjoy.

Choosing Your New Hardware

Home improvement stores are an oasis of design ideas, or you can shop for plates, pulls, knobs, and hinges online. If ordering online, you need to be sure of your measurements. (You can easily return hardware that’s a poor fit to the store if you haven’t damaged it.)

You can search for ideas in pulls online, as well as do comparative shopping for prices. Finding the parts that catch your eye can be more challenging than actually installing the cabinet hardware. Have fun!

Sustainable Countertop Options for 2010

Friday, January 15th, 2010

Of course, each material you use to design or remodel your kitchen carries environmental consequences. But today’s conscious homeowners who appreciate “green” construction are interested in reducing the amount of degree that their cabinets, flooring, or countertops have on the ecosystem. Let’s focus today on materials for your countertops that have a relatively low carbon footprint.

According to Sunset Magazine, recycled glass makes a great choice for replacement countertops since the material is comprised of used glass and, often, with fly ash, a material that heads for the landfill as waste from coal-burning processes.  Colors are bright and can be fit to your décor, but beware of the cost! Recycled glass countertops are among the more expensive options.

Using Wood for Your Countertops

Untreated hardwoods left behind by forest harvesting can make for a solid, environmental choice. Untreated wood certainly requires less industrial processing and creates fewer by-product materials than many other countertop materials.  Durable, wood should be treated with natural oils (mineral oil, for example) to help build resistance to moisture and warping.

You can find suppliers or materials through a search at The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) website.  The FSC sets standards and guides forest management practices in more than 57 countries.

Wheat board is rapidly becoming the wood of choice in many “green” kitchens.  The material comes from wheat straw that is held together with formaldehyde-free binding agents. It can be a great material for building environmentally friendly kitchen cabinet boxes.  In combining untreated hardwood countertops with wheat board cabinets, you can have a sustainable kitchen that looks warm, sturdy, and fantastic.

I wrote last year about choosing materials with low Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC) that can help prevent toxicity in your kitchen.

Kitchen Cabinet Trends for 2010

Friday, January 8th, 2010

It’s a new year and time to look at trends in kitchen cabinet colors and styles that might make a mark in 2010. I’m not making predictions, mind you, but reporting on predictions on home improvement or renovation trends that others have already made. Predictions are a lot like New Year’s resolutions; they’re good when you first make them. After that, anything can happen.

If you’re considering refacing your kitchen cabinets this year, prognosticators have already suggested that colors and color combinations are going to be more refined, quieter, more earthy, and primary. If you want to be bold, do so with your accents. Dark, earth-tone woods are bound to be in vogue, according to columnist Melissa Bullard. The natural look will complement natural countertops and floors. Sustainability will ride the crest of the fashion wave.  But don’t forget cool, easy-to-integrate base colors like gray or light green.

It’s Time for Primary and Soft Colors
Jean Patteson of The Orlando Sentinel believes that calm, uniform base colors in the kitchen can be complemented with few, selected bright accents, like red. These will be trend-setter combinations. But beware of blasting your room with too many bright colors and accents.

If last-year’s trends continue, earth-tone based colors and soothing combinations that reflect our attraction to spas and nature should find favor. Even kitchen paint colors carry names that echo natural cuisine or wide-open vistas.

Wood-finished cabinets will continue the trend of leading the market. Furniture-grade cabinets may make a strong move into the forefront for home improvements.  Cabinet drawers with under-mount slides, pull-out shelves, and complementing hide-away appliances with high-end materials will do well, too. Cherry wood and Maple should be top sellers.

Now let’s see what really happens!

Fighting Kitchen and Bath Clutter

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010

Who says there’s no catch-all solution for storage? Don’t most of us wish there was one remedy for clutter in the kitchen and bath? Tossing everything into one container can be tricky. You have to sort through a lot of items you don’t need just to get to the gravy ladle for that one day a month.  On the other hand, why not put all your essential bathroom items in a well-arranged, hold-all cabinet, or your kitchen odds and ends into special catch-all units for them?

I like the idea of a movable storage cabinet that can double as a cutting or food preparation surface and a wheel-away stowage unit for over-sized pots and pans or rarely used appliances.  Manufacturers sell islands with a large storage cabinet or five sliding drawers. I’ve found a large assortment of styles and features online that run from $129 to $327. They come in most materials, including hardwoods, laminates, metals, and polymers.

Clear Out Bathroom Clutter
Old House Web reviewed a three-shelf bathroom cabinet that is roomy, durable, and has a removable shelf for storing tall items. A super way of getting stuff out of your way is to install a doored cabinet beneath your sink or between the sink and tub area. Models come in conventional framed or frame-less styles that can store towels, washcloths, and bathroom accessories. If you want to add more, according to Hip Improvement Projects, vanity counters and pedestal sinks bring a high return on your investment.

A single, large under-counter cabinet can be a great solution to clutter, especially one with drawers you can assign to members of the family or guests. No one wants to stand around, fishing for a hair brush or fresh bar of soap, especially when your bathroom’s in top demand in the morning.

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