Showing posts with label kitchen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kitchen. Show all posts

The Evolution of the Modern Day Kitchen

This article is provided exclusively to SmartGirlStyle by Ryan Hirst, who is the online marketing and media assistant for Eurofit Direct - a kitchen and office furniture fittings company with a hand in the DIY and Home Improvement niche.

The Evolution of the Modern Day Kitchen
  
How Kitchens Have Changed

The modern day home's kitchen has undergone major fundamental changes. Once upon a time, it was simply a place for the traditional housewife to prepare meals for her family. Today's futuristic kitchen design allows us to use the kitchen not just as a space for cooking, but also for entertaining and dining.

If you look back ten years, you'll likely notice considerable changes made to home designs, and especially to kitchens. Mindsets about this space have evolved as well. Gone are the days of the housewife-only kitchen; it's now a room in which the whole family can (and wants to!) be together. How times have changed!

The Traditional Kitchen
There are many differences between a traditional kitchen and a kitchen of the modern era, including in the room's layout, colours, and materials used. Traditional kitchens, focusing on efficiency and simplicity, embraced straight edges and pragmatic resources. Of course, fewer resources were available overall. Plus, as a rule, homeowners didn’t see the need to spend hard-earned money on one of the most rejected rooms in their homes.

In terms of colour and design in an old-fashioned or traditional kitchen, these are the sort of things you could expect:
- Natural coloured cabinets and cupboards
- Wooden cupboards, cabinets, and worktops
- Simple lighting fixtures
- Antique pewter/traditional cabinet and cupboard handles
- Small fridge
- Stove-like oven
 
These are just a few of the characteristics of a traditional kitchen, and we don’t have to look back very far to identify these traits. But what happened over the last decade to bring out today's modern kitchen? What does it look like? Below is a detailed guide to a modern kitchen and a comparison of the outstanding differences in layout, size, design, technology, and fittings used.


Kitchens nowadays are (in Eurofit Direct's own words, as well as the words of many other interior designers, home improvement experts, and bloggers) ‘the heart of the home’. It has become the place within the home for time with loved ones, a place we can relax and enjoy time socialising.

Traditionally, the kitchen was a fairly small room (compared to the dining and living rooms) in the back corner of the home, separated from the rest of the house. This is simply not the case anymore. Instead, open plan living has meant that more and more kitchens have taken the main stage and are actually a dining room and living room...as well as a kitchen.

With open plan living, we've seen not only dining tables and chairs incorporated into kitchen spaces, but also sofa sets, televisions, and islands or breakfast bars. All with the intention of entertaining while allowing a practical place for homeowners to wine, dine, and entertain.

Colour and themes within the kitchen have changed dramatically in the last ten years or so as well. The days of natural, earthy colours and wood-only material finishes have simply disappeared. Instead, many of today's homeowners go for bold and bright colours along with finishes such as high gloss and marble worktops.

Some other main characteristics of the modern day kitchen are:
- Tiled and laminate or natural wood flooring
- Extensive lighting options
- Curved corners for a stylish look
- American style fridges
- Clever hidden storage options
- Soft closing drawer dampers
- Stools instead of chairs

Another thing that has changed considerably from era to era within the kitchen (and within nearly all aspects of everyday life, for that matter) is technology.

Technology in the Modern Day Kitchen
Nowadays, the kitchen is a place that incorporates stylish appliances and crazy gadgets and technology, some that we maybe don’t need but simply cannot resist. In the modern era, we're using so many different pieces of technology within the kitchen all for the simple purpose of making our lives easier.

Remember the days of gas stoves and pots requiring scrubbing? I think most people will; these days are approaching distant history with things such as self-cleaning ovens and sensor-equipped dishwashers.

Sometimes this may reflect negatively on society as a whole - many people are becoming lazier and alarmingly technology-dependent. Some even believe there's no need to do certain jobs at all because, hey, there's an app or a gadget for that. While this may be true for some things, the mindset does come at a cost. We have to be careful not to trade in our basic skills and capabilities for complete trust in technology.

Keeping that warning in mind, there are so many handy pieces of technology that have entered and integrated into home designs, specifically kitchens. Here are a few favourite kitchen-focused technologies:
    - Induction Hobs: Allow for the heating of pots and pans without a flame; come with a child lock option (a sensible selection).
    - Televisions: Can make food prep and entertaining overall easier and more enjoyable.
    - Touch Taps: Allow for a simple touch on part of the tap to switch it on or off. Perfect for when hands are full.
    - Water Dispensers: Allow for ice and water to be kept at-the-ready and dispensed with the touch of a button.
    - The Panasonic Toaster: With a dual grill function, allows for toasting different shaped breads. Also looks sleek with its gently curved edges. (This has the potential to become a huge hit within homes in the UK, where Eurofit Direct is located.) 

All of the things I have mentioned here show how much the kitchen has changed over the last few years. It's now a room we simply cannot ignore, and we should be doing everything we can to improve our kitchen's style as well as purpose.

***

This article was provided by Ryan Hirst. Ryan is the marketing assistant at Eurofit Direct, a kitchen fittings and office furniture fittings supplier to the UK, with a hand in DIY and home improvement.
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Bluey-Greeny-Grey Kitchen Cabinets (lowers)

On a whim last week (after thinking about it for months), I painted out our lower kitchen cabinets. Benjamin Moore's Buxton Blue, if you're curious. Which is an absolutely lovely color - a warm bluey-greeny-grey.


I've been hesitant to change out the all-white scheme of the cabinetry, simply because we have white appliances, and I didn't want them to stand out. But, at the end of the day, I love color, and I was ready for a (budget-friendly) change in the kitchen.
 

I love the color itself - it's warm and deep but still light and fresh.
 

But I'm not the only one loving this versatile color; it's everywhere!:


 

homerenovations.about.com
The color looks great even in a bedroom. Or bathroom.
 


 
 

So. Bluey greeny greyish kitchen. Yes, please!
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How to Combat the "Gimmes"

On occasion (okay, fine, FREQUENTLY) I get a huge case of the "gimmes" in which I want stuff that's newer, better, brighter, more different than what I've got already.
 
(Frankly, this can be a very expensive medical condition. Especially when I've got a healthy "gimme" list going on for nearly every room in my house...) 
 
What I'm about to reveal to you is an embarrassingly honest display of what I do to combat this malady. It's a pretty fail-proof prescription, really. And it brings me satisfaction and contentment.
 
Ready? Here goes:
 
I clean.
 

For many of you, this is a no-brainer. Of course cleaning is good! you're thinking to your scrubbed little selves. Not for me, though. I'd rather be knee-deep in a paint project than anywhere near a squeegee (sp?) or vacuum.


Many of you probably enjoy cleaning and find it therapeutic. I can understand this odd sense of attack-scrub mode about 4% of the time, although 90% of my time is spent trying to avoid the activity. (And the other 6% just wants to eat cookies in peace.)


What a thorough cleaning and pick-up session does, though, is make me realize I don't have to buy "stuff" to make things presentable, even pretty, around here.


Sure, I'd love to paint walls and frame out the bathroom mirror and replace shower curtains and vanity hardware. And I'll get to those things eventually, but for today, I need to take care of what I've got in the first place!


Plus, to be honest, it takes so much time to do a house-wide cleaning job, that I have no minutes to spare at the end of the day for shopping. :) Win-win.

 
Do any of you like cleaning? What's your most rewarding household chore? (Me: Doing dishes.) What's your worst chore? (Me: Dusting. Ugh.)
 
Or do you have your own method to combat the gimmes? I'd love to hear it. Because, in case you couldn't tell, having to clean is really something I could live without...
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Upcycled Thrifted Stool

What with its being Thanksgiving tomorrow, and you have family matters to attend to, here's the quickest fairy tale ever told. You ready?
 
Once upon a time, this stool lived happily ever after.
 

Now, the lengthier version, complete with character development and motives and greed, is as follows:
 
Once upon a time, a stool started out, alone and ugly and outcast, at a thrift store. Because the Kind & Patient Queen of the Land (ahem) needed one more stool at her kitchen counter to keep her three adorable children from greedily fighting over the two existing stools, she nabbed it.

 
The Queen bought it for pennies, brought it home, cleaned it off, spray painted it a plum color selected by the lovely and strong-willed 4-yr-old Princess, and added antique glaze so it wouldn't stand out too much from the other old and "real-time" distressed stools, even though it's a different color.
 
The Queen proceeded to bake herself a rewarding batch of cookies and managed to refrain from eating two of them before snapping this pic. She quickly devoured them after the shot.

 
The end.

 

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Happy weekend.

Kitchen Floor Discovery #1: No thanks.
 

 
Kitchen Floor Discovery #2: Yes please!
 
 
Have a lovely weekend.
 
xox
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fabric-backed shelves

You guys, I have a sickness. And it's called "I can't stop doing stuff in my house." Now, this wouldn't be a problem if it was useful stuff, like laundry and vacuuming and cooking. However (and unfortunately for my family who happens to enjoy a delicious dinner or two), it usually involves messes spread over all available surfaces and lots of paint.

This project was on the smaller scale (much to everyone's relief) but it just might rank among my favorites thus far. Inspired by this post, and because my one open cabinet was woefully dark and overstuffed and lame, annnnnnd because it's visible right when you walk into the front door, I decided to amp up the style factor and tackle the fabric-backed cupboard for a fresh new look.


Actually, I had attempted face-lifting this particular cupboard recently in the past, but I chose paint that was the total wrong color and I then filled the dang thing too full of random dishes so it looked, in a word, lame.

For $2.50, I bought a piece of foam board at WallyWorld, cut it to size, and pretty much followed the tutorial I linked to above. Fortunately, I had some fabric left over from this project that would work in the kitchen, so I used that.

Then I edited my already meager collection of displayable dishware because I'm trying to embrace the adage "less is more." (I believe this in many instances, but it's often hard for me to narrow things down. Which is why my posts, like this one, are wordier than necessary. Heh.)



It's a work in progress (my whole house is, frankly), but it's a start. And it took about 30 minutes to do and clean up. Which means there's room on the countertops to have made dinner and chocolate cake, nearly half of which I may or may not have consumed already.


My husband's reaction to the cupboard: "Wow. Fancy." No exclamation points (he's not one to become weepy over, say, a photo of someone's beautiful interior like I am), but he likes it. Phew.
 
{shared here and here}
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Kitchen: House Tour

Once upon a time, there lived a woman who cooked over an open flame. She probably burned woolly mammoth stew a lot. She probably would've killed, or at least seriously maimed, for a kitchen like this:
 
(errr...minus the mid-renovation status...)
 


(Photos taken circa 2008.)
Not me, though! When we moved into our home in 2006, the kitchen was the armpit of the house. Dark wood, zero natural light, low-hanging fluorescent light tiles, cave-like and depressing.
 
We did some cabinet moving (swung the cabinet that caved-in the kitchen, which was originally mounted right above the countertop bar so as to block sightlines and light, out into the dining room so as to lighten up the kitchen but not lose precious cabinet space), repainted all cabinets white, added hardward, installed an over-the-range microwave, and put in a tile backsplash.



(Photos taken circa 2008.)
We've changed some things since doing this, but not a lot. Our dream is to replace countertops with something much awesomer than formica. Surely you have dreams as romantic and earth-shattering as ours.
 
To check out other lovely works in progress in my home, click here.
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