A few glass cabinets (no open shelves — too dusty here in the desert!)
Not exact matches
The kitchen has a
few glass - front
cabinets, so I will probably display my cake stands there.
Glass and wood
cabinets, lower lighting levels, and displays with just a
few, carefully chosen items, help communicate exclusiveness and luxury.
I also like the
glass cabinets, I never thought about something like that, but it would be perfect for all my sets of dishes (I can't seem to stop buying them, I gotten a
few sets from estate sales).
Maybe some open shelves,
glass front, white
cabinets, or
fewer, but upper
cabinets still make sense and are important unless you have huge kitchen, but most people don't.
Tucked into a
few choice corners are small baskets that are useful for corralling clutter while a
few wall hangings double as small
glass fronted
cabinets for bits and bobs.
I like the idea of having a
few glass - pane
cabinets for displaying pretty dishes.
, but the
glass cabinets are perfect for storing a
few treasures and books.
In other areas, keep the rest of the room light with pale walls and floors and add a
few glass fronted
cabinets and even mirrored splashbacks to reflect light around the room.
As soon as we closed on our house, we started several projects immediately — we replaced our roof, removed the scruffy edges on the extra carport (aka «winnie hole»), added hardwood (red oak) floors in the living room, dining room, kitchen / den, and laundry room to match the floors in the back half of the house, screened and recoated the hardwood floors in the back half of the house, replaced the two sliding
glass doors from the kitchen / den out onto the porch with French doors, removed doors between the kitchen and dining room and between the den and entry way, painted the wood panelling in the den, painted the
cabinets in the kitchen, replaced the old
cabinet hardware, replaced the sink and range / hood, replaced a single wall oven with a double one, added granite tile kitchen countertops, added a beadboard backsplash, replaced a
few light fixtures, added a chair rail in the dining room, added crown moulding in the living room and dining room, and painted lots of rooms.
I opted to splurge on a
few things like
glass doors, a full - depth refrigerator
cabinet, full height
cabinets, and tongue - and - groove ceilings, but saved by not adding a lot of drawers or extra bells and whistles.
Beadboard, retro - style appliances, a Hoosier - style
cabinet, schoolhouse pendants, seeded
glass and crystal drawer knobs are just a
few of the details that keep the home's original spirit alive in this Coronado, California vacation home.