Showing posts with label Kitchen Makeover. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kitchen Makeover. Show all posts

4/6/22

BEFORE Kitchen Makeover - One Room Challenge Week 1

 

 

Hello everyone, I could not be more excited to be writing my first post about the Spring One Room Challenge! For those of you who are not familiar, twice a year Better Homes and Gardens runs the "One Room Challenge" which gives participants 8 weeks to make over a room in there house. 

I signed up for the Spring challenge hoping to makeover our kitchen during that time. We have been doing a lot of the background work on the kitchen for the last couple months since moving in. However we haven't gotten started, so I thought this was the exact push we needed. The kitchen is one of the most important spaces to us in a home, we spend a ton of time in there preparing meals and it is a busy space for our family. 

 

To start this challenge, we need to go over where the kitchen is now and our plans to update it. In this video below I walk you through the whole kitchen and go over our plans. Take a quick watch to see where we are starting. I will also go through it here. 

 
 
 
We bought this house in November and it was very much a 90s builder grade fixer upper. We did some work to other parts of the house before moving in but had not yet touched the kitchen. The kitchen itself is very 90s builder grade with orange oak cabinets, laminate countertops, white appliances, a fan, florescent light and floor tile backsplash. However the footprint and space is all there for us. It actually is very functional for our family, especially in comparison to our last home. 
 
Since the space is very functional but not aesthetically pleasing we are going to do a kitchen makeover but we will not be gutting the space. Here are our plans, possibly in the order we plan to complete them. 

  • Paint Walls- Done before we moved in with the rest of the house
  • Replace flooring- Done before we moved in with rest of the house
  • Remove florescent light & fan, install can lights 
  • Remove desk area and replace with a regular lower cabinet 
  • Replace countertops 
  • Take bar top to counter height
  • Replace sink 
  • Remove & Replace backsplash 
  • Add center prep island 
  • Swap for new cabinet doors
  • Replace Appliances
  • Remove above stove microwave, replace with vent hood 
  • Add cabinet hardware 
Phew I think that's it, seems like a crazy lot when I see it in list form. However some of these will be done together and some a quick pieces once the others are done. 
 
 
To get to this point we have done several things and laid out the design vision for the space. Here is my original design inspo before we moved into the house. A couple pieces have been updated that I go over in the video but the design vibe and vision remain pretty much the same. Once we knew the design we were going for we went to pick out our countertops, tested paint samples of potential cabinet colors and got the materials for the kitchen island. 
 

Next on our list is having a team help us with the electrical for the lights and build a new cabinet for the desk area. Then we will be ready to have countertops installed. As part of that process they will take our bar top to counter height and replace the sink. So a lot will be done there all at once. They will also remove the current backsplash, or it will be done before the countertop install. 
 

During all this we will also be building our kitchen island for the center of the space and I will need to order the new cabinet doors as soon as possible since they will take awhile to come in, but those will go on toward the end once many of the other pieces are complete. 


After that we will need to pick and install a backsplash/ hardware and shop for new appliances. I am so thrilled to take you along this journey and I hope by the end of this challenge we will have a new beautiful and even more functional kitchen space for our family. 

Check back next week for updates! 

Emily

 

3/17/20

Kitchen Tour

See the post with before & afters of our kitchen here.

Tour of our current kitchen look:











All Kitchen Posts and Videos:


Kitchen Sources:

  • Cabinet Transformation Kit- here
  • Backsplash tile- here
  • Island light- similar- here
  • Gold tray- here
  • Pitcher- here

3/10/20

Kitchen Makeover- Before & Afters

Our kitchen is the space in our house that has seen the biggest change since we moved in and we love the transformation. We made most of the changes ourselves over time, I will run down each step below. Here is what our kitchen looked like when we bought the house (listing picture)


Our Kitchen Today






Updates we made: 

  • First we painted the cabinets, video on the process here
    • This is the kit we used
  • Next we changed the light and added the backsplash 
    • This is the light
    • This is the backsplash tile 
  • Then we replace the appliances 
  • Most recently we added a row of stacked cabinets & took the trim to the ceiling
    • Post & video on that process- here



2/27/20

DIY Stacked Cabinets// Extending our Kitchen Cabinets to the Ceiling


Hi There,

We recently completed a home project that we have wanted to do for the last couple years, we added stacked cabinets in our kitchen and extended our trim all the way to the ceiling. I did film a video of the process that will give you a look at the whole process but I thought it would be helpful to write out all the steps here as well.



The back story on our kitchen: When we purchased our home 2.5 years ago our kitchen looked like this: brown wood cabinets, white appliances and no backsplash


Pretty quickly after moving in we painted the cabinets white, I also filmed a video on how we did that here. That left the space looking like this: 


Over time we also installed a backsplash, changed out the hardware, light and eventually got new appliances, leaving the space looking like this: 

Our "last" project was filling in the large space above our cabinets, we actually have very high ceilings in our kitchen but only had 24" cabinets. This left an additional 24" between the cabinets and the ceiling. The gameplan was to add a layer of stacked cabinets, these cabinets were 12" tall, leaving 12" left between the ceiling and cabinets. This is the area we decided to fill in with trim. Here is a look at the process

Step 1- Buy, Paint and Install Stacked Cabinets: 

I purchased these stock cabinets from Lowes for all cabinets except one that was an odd size. I actually purchased them one at a time as budget allowed and painted them with the same paint as the rest of our kitchen cabinets. Once they were all painted it was time to install them. 


To Install: 
We took off the original crown molding at the top of the cabinets, then found the studs that our existing cabinets were installed in and simply drilled them into the same studs. ** However once we got all the cabinets up there we realized our wall was actually uneven so we had to put wood shims behind certain cabinets to make them all line up. I have heard an uneven wall is very common so just keep this in mind*


Step 2- Build Box 


Most people would likely be able to skip this step but all of our cabinets were the correct size to buy stock cabinets, except one in the corner. So we decided to just build a box in that space that we could use to display decor and cookbooks. This was probably a far from professional job but we built the box with MDF. We built the box in place since again the wall was uneven and we could tell building it elsewhere and trying to install it wouldn't match up. I used wood glue to put the box together and then used nails to secure and drilled into the studs. 

Step 3- Wood fill seams

After getting all the stacked cabinets up I used wood putty to fill in the seams between the lower and upper cabinet rows to make it look more seamless. Let it partially dry and then sand to smooth. Eventually I painted over these seams as well. 

Step 4- Build Frame for Extended Trim


We decided that we wanted to build a small frame from the cabinets to the ceiling to make installing our trim much easier and more secure. We simply used scrap pieces of wood and drilled them to the ceiling then ran 2x4's vertically attaching to the pieces on the ceiling. Then this would be what we attached the MDF sheet to directly

Step 5- Prep MDF- Attach to frame

We purchased a sheet of .5" MDF and cut it to size to fit the space between our cabinets and ceiling. Once we had cut it we used liquid nails on the frame to get it attached. Once it was up there we added some nails to secure it to the frame. 

Step 6- Prep and Attach new Molding

Once your MDF sheet is up it is time for the trim, now what you do here all comes down to preference. I wanted a big chunky piece of crown molding at the top, so I bought the biggest piece I could find at Lowes. Then we also added an additional piece of trim to the lower section of the MDF. I love how it turned, the molding and trim brought the whole look together and made it look like a custom kitchen. 


Step 7- Sand, Putty & Paint

After everything has been built and attached it is time to give any rough areas a sand, fill in any holes, nails or seams then paint. I ended up needing to do two full coats of paint and one coat of touch up. 


Here is the current look of the kitchen, we absolutely love how it turned out. It completely transformed our kitchen for a low cost and a minimal time commitment. We worked on this one evening and one morning so less then one full day of work minus some of the painting I did later. 

Cost Breakdown: 
-Unfinished cabinets (4)- $200- we got some on sale 
- 1 sheet .5" MDF- $24
-(2) 2x4s- $7
-Trim- $4
TOTAL: 257 :)

The last thing we would love to do is buy new cabinet doors for some of the top cabinets with the rounded molding at the top to match the rest, here is a little look at what it would look like 


3/2/18

Kitchen Cabinet Makeover/ Painting our Kitchen Cabinets

When we purchased our house we knew before the offer was in that we wanted to do some updates to the kitchen: Paint the cabinets white, change the hardware, get new appliances and install a backsplash. We budgeted the money to do these projects and planned to get started on them as soon as majority of the boxes were unpacked. One thing we learned with our first home is the longer you wait to get started on a home project the less likely it will actually get done.

So about a month after we moved in, maybe a bit more we had some local companies come out and give us quotes for ONLY painting the cabinets white. You would not believe these quotes, we were in complete shock. After getting these quotes going all the way up to $7000, for yes only paint and nothing else we realized this was a project we should probably take on ourselves.

I had several friends who had used the Rustoleom kit to redo their kitchen cabinets and they had recommended it to us so I started researching and watching videos. I felt pretty confident this needed to be our route. Here are the before pictures of our kitchen, from the listing.

As you can see there was nothing wrong with the kitchen it was just not our style. The whole kitchen, with the floors was just too much orange tone wood for us. We knew how much just simply painting the cabinets would change and brighten up the space. We also had the exact same granite in our last house with white cabinets so we knew it would work.

For the actual process of painting the cabinets I filmed the process along the way, the video is below at the bottom of the post so you can get a better idea of the steps.

Part of the reason we were hesitant to take on this project originally is because we were afraid it was going to take weeks and weeks. However we were pleasantly surprised that it did not, we committed to cranking it out as fast as possible with everything else we had going on. We spent about a week and a half total painting and split it up between the upper cabinet and the bottom cabinets. The use of a paint sprayer also was a time saver and gave a really nice to the cabinets. Here are the after pictures:





We are so happy with how the cabinets came out and that it only end up costing us a couple hundred dollars to do the work rather then thousands. Next we will be installing the backsplash, changing out the light fixture, and the sink faucet, we will be having someone else do this work for us. Then lastly we would like to replace the appliances with stainless steal. I will come back with updates and show you the progress along the way.

Watch the Full Tutorial and Process Here: 

Sources: 

Get Rustoleum kit- here
** We used the color Linen for our cabinets

Get Paint Sprayer- here

Get Cabinet Door Knobs here: http://amzn.to/2l1yE0N

Get Cabinet Drawer Pulls here (12 pack): http://amzn.to/2B9WmON

Follow me on Instagram: @emilyburn01
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