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Posts Tagged ‘Kitchen’

From Blah to Tada: Super Easy Bottle Dish Soap Dispenser

Chris recently posted about how wonderful anyone-can-do-it DIY projects are. This recycled-bottle dish soap dispenser definitely fits the bill and coming across it made me downright giddy.

I’ve been griping to the Mister for months about having an eyesore on our kitchen sink. Been searching high and low in every thrift and craft store I enter for something to replace it, something with some character and whimsy (I almost bought a vintage still-sticky syrup pourer with a smiley face sticker on it, that is how desperate we are talking). Claire, the blogger behind Blah to Tada, has come up with something simple and cute to replace the ugliness many of us have perched atop our counters right now.

Glass + spout + soap = problem solved.

Check out Blah to Tada for the whole post and do go through the whole site.  It had me yelling out “TADA!” to my computer after viewing each transformation.

Thanks, Claire!

[Images: Blah to Tada]

Crate Digging: How to Make a Soda Crate Spice Rack

The kitchen is one of the rooms in our house that we spend the most time in. Claire and I live in Humboldt County, California, which is blessed with incredible local food resources. College of the Redwoods, where I teach, has its own organic farm and CSA.  Our local food co-op is well-stocked with local cheeses like Humboldt Fog, local organic meats and local seafood.

The kitchen was the first room that we started tearing into when we started renovating our house, and unfortunately, it was one of the last to be finished. We wanted the kitchen to be a place where we actually wanted to hang out and spend our time. The kitchen as we originally found it was fairly well laid out, but filled with horrible cheap 80’s cabinets, dingy floral wallpaper and cheap appliances.

We installed a dishwasher, put up drywall over the wallpaper and painted the room a bright yellow and installed some funky lighting fixtures. It was a great start, but the stove—an inexpensive Sears model with an old pegboard over it— continued to taunt us.


The horror. After removing the pegboard.

What could we do to make the stove area fun and functional? A new stove would be a good start. We started combing Craigslist for vintage stoves, and finally found a great (but really dirty and greasy) one that we could afford. Claire put a huge amount of elbow grease (and gallons of vinegar) into cleaning it. You can read about her valiant efforts HERE.

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IKEA Hack: Creating a Hanging Cocktail Bar from Dish Draining Racks

Once the kitchen cabinets are full and the countertops cluttered, where else is there to go but up?

Tight on space and budget, an unnamed IKEAHacker created this spirit-and-glassware storage center from IKEA’s ASKER dish drying racks, hung on an ASKER rail, with a few wine glass racks suspended below.

“Constrained for space and renting (so not wanting to make big holes in the wall) I decided to hang everything I could in the kitchen.  This included hanging pots and pans over the entrance to the kitchen (careful to hang the small ones over the passage to permit passage for up to 6′3″), and the Asker suspended liquor bar hack.”

[Asker Liquor Bar Hack at IKEA Hacker]

Easy Indoor Container Gardens Make Home Food Production a Cinch

Last week, the New York Times’ Michael Tortorello explored a few new models of indoor container gardens, which allow for those without any outdoor green space, or even choice windows, to produce their own herbs and greens at home. Tortorello points out though some traditionalists argue that real gardening can only occur outdoors,

“the American consumer seems to think otherwise. According to Bruce Butterfield, research director at the National Gardening Association, container gardening is roughly a billion-dollar-a-year retail business. And he said about half the country’s home food growers — that is, 18 million households — do at least some gardening in containers.

After several years of steady growth, container sales climbed 25 percent last year at Gardener’s Supply Company, a mail-order business with a store in Burlington, Vt., said Maree Gaetani, the company’s spokeswoman. That’s “mostly owing to the increase in vegetable gardening and people’s desire to grow anywhere they can,” she said.”

The most exciting items in the summary seem to be the Herb Grow Bag, a shoebox sized polypropylene sack that’s designed to be paired up with a friend and fit inside a Self-Watering Tray, allowing them to suck up water through the bottom.

Have a peek at rest of the article to see more indoor gardening options, like the MyGreens Light Garden:

[Read More: In the Garden: Container Gardens Get Spring Started Indoors. Images: New York Times]

Etched to Order: D.I.Y. Dry Goods Organization

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I’ve always been attracted to those old, vintage kitchen tins. I owned some lovely ones for a while that were shiny and silver with sleek black labels reading COFFEE, SUGAR, TEA, and FLOUR. They looked great, but they weren’t large enough to contain the amount of tea and coffee that Garth and I keep in our house. We also use a variety of flours, sugars, and other dry goods that deserve convenient containers. I don’t expect to find manufactured containers with the perfect labels for my specific kitchen, but I did want to create a system to organize all the dry goods in our kitchen.

In our house, both Garth and I cook, though I tend to be the person who arranges things in the kitchen. My hope is that a well displayed, well labeled wall of ingredients would cut down on his cries of, “Hey! Where is the ________?” and my later question, “When you were cooking the other day, where on earth did you put the ______?”

The solution was fairly easy, attractive, and not very labor intensive. While fixing up our kitchen I left a cabinet door off one wall cabinet. This opened up shelves for a clear, organized display of our baking supplies, nuts, and dried fruits. Then I made my own equivalent of the old kitchen tins.

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Steamy Lights: How We Found Our Perfect Wall Sconces

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Garth and I have been on a quest to find and creatively reuse old or discarded objects in our kitchen makeover. We hope that the result of our labor is a unique kitchen that is very functional. Alas, finding the right item to reuse can be tricky when we are problem solving. This was the case when we decided to replace the wall sconces next to the windows. The wall sconces that graced our kitchen walls when we moved in were not offensive, but as we began to pull the room together it became obvious that we should investigate other options.

Not knowing much about wiring a lamp myself, I ran to all the light fixture stores I could think of (this didn’t take too long, as we don’t live in a big town). Nothing felt inspired enough to go on our walls.

Garth and I began to brainstorm what type of object we could re-purpose into wall sconces. Mason jars? Bottles? Cans? Hmmm. I headed to the source for all things handmade: Etsy.com. It didn’t take long for us to discover an Etsy shop that we fell in love with called lightexture. Their self-description reads:

potlight

ClayLight Simple from lightexture

lightexture is a collaboration between an architect and a lighting designer, We work together to explore light through the construction of lighting fixtures.
In our light construction we incorporate ready-made objects, lighting components, pottery by ceramic artist Sharan Elran and more. The lamps are fitted and assembled by hand in our studio. One of our goals is to create energy efficient fixtures, while maintaining our focus on their atmospheric and spatial performance.

Not only were all the lamps in this shop interesting, the light each piece casts is artful and exciting. We were sold on the SteamLight Sconces almost at once, which are made from steamer baskets. The re-purposed cooking tools felt like the perfect thing to hang in our kitchen. These lights have the added bonus of opening and closing to allow more or less light into the room while casting amazing shadows on the wall.

steamlight

Although I am committed to doing things ourselves as much as possible, I also love to support people who make amazing and beautiful things way better than I could. This is definitely the case in this situation. We placed our order and received our sconces in a very timely fashion. If I wasn’t already in love with the object, the packaging certainly helped—each sconce was beautifully packaged in recycled cardboard boxes with a small, silver stamped image of the lamp on top. It felt like Christmas.

Installing them did not seem to difficult (though I admit, you have to ask Garth about that)—they came with very clear instructions to follow. In no time we had new sconces on the wall.

Check out lightexture’s other website, which includes animations of how these amazing lights work.

While you do that, we will be having a SteamLight disco party in our kitchen.