After living in our house a year, we finally got around to adding some color to our brown, brown, and more BROWN kitchen.
It was a time consuming project, I'm not going to lie. But, to tell you the truth, I really thought it would be a lot harder than it was!
When we first moved into our house, I told my husband that I would like to just paint the cabinets and that I could do it for a couple hundred bucks. Everything was new, why rip it out. Besides, this isn't our forever home, since we're military. We just need to make it nicer and easier to sell in 4 years. (Three, now) He wasn't really digging that idea. I humored him and we went to Home Depot and priced out what he would liked done to the kitchen... it would cost a few THOUSAND dollars... like probably 8k at least. Yea, not happening.
Eventually, he came my way. As usually! We set out to redo our kitchen after my daughters second birthday in early April. It took us about two weeks to finish, because we were working during my husbands weekends. So all-in-all, about 4-5 days of work. LONG days of work. Totally worth it though!
We started out by taking all of the doors off the cabinets. We labeled the doors, while doing so with sticky notes. But, by the end half of them had fallen off. I tried to keep the sticky notes with the doors, still, but my husband had stopped trying, so that was fun...
Start out by finding yourself a cute little helper!
At this point in the game, I was starting to become a little overwhelmed by all the doors.
Side note: I painted the fronts first, I would recommend painting the backs first. Because I had to touch up the fronts on some of these, I don't care about the backs as much as the fronts...
I painted the doors with three coats of paint on the fronts and two on the backs. Afterwards, I did three coats of polyurethane. We did the same thing for the cabinets.
In this picture, you can see the light fixture. We had discussed replacing it, as well. But, for now, I just painted it white. I actually like it like that. But, if this was our forever home, I'm sure we'd replace it and the counters. Which are actually really nice corian counters. I just don't like the color.
One thing I absolutely hated about these cabinets was the lack of a knob or handle! Especially on the long drawer in the island. I was always bending or breaking my nails on that one. So, we drilled holes into all the cabinets and drawers and added knobs.
After reattaching the doors, we had to wait a while for our back splash to arrive. We ordered it from Lowes, and I just love it! I decided I wanted a blue and white themed because of my hutch in the kitchen and the chalk board frame, both of which are a blue color. It all pulls together, nicely!
While we waited, we painted our walls a nice stone grey.
Once the tile arrived we started marking out the tile mounters and getting them ready to place the tiles. My husband had to leave for a work meeting and boy scouts with our son on this day, so I ended up doing most of this myself. I tell you what, I never would have thought I was capable of laying tile before this project!
Before grout.
Now, here's for the fun part, the REVEAL! Now, keep in mind.. for these first few pictures, we moved the old stove over to the MIL suite and moved that stove over to our side. For some reason the stove over there was nicer and it just happened to match our stuff. The last picture is the complete package!
Here is again, before!
And after!
Notice the light fixture is now painted white. Blends in and out of sight.
Still need to spray paint that light fixture. And I have added a few coat hooks under the wall vent to hang our aprons on.
So, this isn't the BEST picture, but here it is with the other stove moved in. I've added a few little changes here and there, as far as decorations go.
I love my kitchen a whole lot more, now!
Here is the break down of what everything cost us:
White paint- $20
grey paint- $46 (two cans)
Poly- $4
Knobs- $39
Back Splash- $150
Grout- $29
Tile Mounter- $40
Brushes- $15
Tape- $10
_________
Total: $ 353
And I still have paint and poly left over for future projects!
What do you think?
When we first moved into our house, I told my husband that I would like to just paint the cabinets and that I could do it for a couple hundred bucks. Everything was new, why rip it out. Besides, this isn't our forever home, since we're military. We just need to make it nicer and easier to sell in 4 years. (Three, now) He wasn't really digging that idea. I humored him and we went to Home Depot and priced out what he would liked done to the kitchen... it would cost a few THOUSAND dollars... like probably 8k at least. Yea, not happening.
Eventually, he came my way. As usually! We set out to redo our kitchen after my daughters second birthday in early April. It took us about two weeks to finish, because we were working during my husbands weekends. So all-in-all, about 4-5 days of work. LONG days of work. Totally worth it though!
We started out by taking all of the doors off the cabinets. We labeled the doors, while doing so with sticky notes. But, by the end half of them had fallen off. I tried to keep the sticky notes with the doors, still, but my husband had stopped trying, so that was fun...
Start out by finding yourself a cute little helper!
At this point in the game, I was starting to become a little overwhelmed by all the doors.
Side note: I painted the fronts first, I would recommend painting the backs first. Because I had to touch up the fronts on some of these, I don't care about the backs as much as the fronts...
I painted the doors with three coats of paint on the fronts and two on the backs. Afterwards, I did three coats of polyurethane. We did the same thing for the cabinets.
One thing I absolutely hated about these cabinets was the lack of a knob or handle! Especially on the long drawer in the island. I was always bending or breaking my nails on that one. So, we drilled holes into all the cabinets and drawers and added knobs.
After reattaching the doors, we had to wait a while for our back splash to arrive. We ordered it from Lowes, and I just love it! I decided I wanted a blue and white themed because of my hutch in the kitchen and the chalk board frame, both of which are a blue color. It all pulls together, nicely!
While we waited, we painted our walls a nice stone grey.
Once the tile arrived we started marking out the tile mounters and getting them ready to place the tiles. My husband had to leave for a work meeting and boy scouts with our son on this day, so I ended up doing most of this myself. I tell you what, I never would have thought I was capable of laying tile before this project!
Before grout.
Now, here's for the fun part, the REVEAL! Now, keep in mind.. for these first few pictures, we moved the old stove over to the MIL suite and moved that stove over to our side. For some reason the stove over there was nicer and it just happened to match our stuff. The last picture is the complete package!
Here is again, before!
And after!
Notice the light fixture is now painted white. Blends in and out of sight.
Still need to spray paint that light fixture. And I have added a few coat hooks under the wall vent to hang our aprons on.
So, this isn't the BEST picture, but here it is with the other stove moved in. I've added a few little changes here and there, as far as decorations go.
I love my kitchen a whole lot more, now!
Here is the break down of what everything cost us:
White paint- $20
grey paint- $46 (two cans)
Poly- $4
Knobs- $39
Back Splash- $150
Grout- $29
Tile Mounter- $40
Brushes- $15
Tape- $10
_________
Total: $ 353
And I still have paint and poly left over for future projects!
What do you think?