Thursday 22 October 2009

The Evolution of Our Kitchen

Again I feel this may be a slightly boring post for people who aren't me, what can I say, its raining a lot here in Bath!

As I may have mentioned before Rich and I live in a very tiny cottage, its nearly 200 years old (meaning there isn't a straight line in the place!) and for the last 4 years we have been slowly redecorating it. When we moved in the decor was VERY dated, I think it was last done in the early 80's, don't get me wrong the place was scrupulously clean and the lovely old lady we brought it off had obviously loved it (she'd lived here for the last 40 years!) but it just wasn't us.

My favourite room in the house is the kitchen and this was the room that needed the most work, I should explain a bit about the kitchen its is TINY, and I do mean tiny, it used to be the old back yard but in the 80's the previous owners roofed it over to extend the house. Our cottage is built into the side of a hill, meaning it quite literally sits with its bum buried, this means the only natural light coming into the kitchen come from a big velux window in the roof because the ceiling is at ground level.

Here is the kitchen a few months after we moved in...



Look at the tiles...beige with tea pots on...nice!

Here it is after I finally snapped one weekend and we ripped all the tiles off...



The units in the above pics where dreadful chipboard and formica things, these pictures still give me the shivers. After we'd been in the house about 18 months we scrapped up enough to get 2 new hand-built units, we had them made by a great local craftsman in Bristol. We had looked at what we could buy off the shelf at all the usual kitchen places but to be honest it was the same price to have hand-built units that where made to measure (and Richard design) with Oak work tops.



In this pic we have the new units but a few of the crappy old cupboards where holding on, we had quite a time getting them off the wall (when I say we I mean the royal we...as in Rich!) also as storage space was at a premium we couldn't get rid of them until we replaced them with something. Also can I just point out the lino floor here, this stuff actually does give me nightmares (I bet it gives Rich and his Dad nightmares too as they had to chip it off the floor)

Note to self: next time, lay new floor tiles BEFORE getting hand made units built and fitted.

So are we ready for the grand unveiling....



Looook at the floor tiles!!! Sorry I realize I'm very sad but I've waited years for this! Ok it has taken us nearly 4 years but we have been hampered slightly but lack of cash and time (and 2 redundancies!) but we have learned a hell of a lot, for instance ebay is brilliant, don't buy from reclamation yards, they will totally rip you off, we brought all the tiles from ebay and salvo web. We worked out after that if we had bought the tiles from the local reclamation yard we would have paid about £2000, we got nearly 1000 tiles for £500, including the hire of a van to collect them and the petrol to drive them back to Bath.
Another little trick I discovered was when it came to buying cement, we got ours from B&Q where a standard bag of cement for the floor is about £13-£15 a bag, but if you keep an eye out for split bags you can get them at about quarter the price. I don't know if every store does this but B&Q Chippenham does, we got 4 split bags for £16 and we had more then enough to do the whole ground floor of the cottage.

So my undieing gratitude goes to Rich and Rick for spending another horrible weekend once again ruining their knees and losing their sanity trying to get it all finished.



So to everyone who has to suffer living with rubbish kitchens, have faith you will get there in then end and when you do it will be totally worth it!


P.S. Please ignore the dirty dishes I have just spotted in the last few pics, just because I have a lovely kitchen doesn't meaning I've stopped being a domestic slut!

5 comments:

*pur-ple said...

I enjoy reading your posts & don't find them boring at all. Just honest and intriguing. I am decorating our old kitchen too, I'm at the "nearly finished grouting the floor tiles" stage!

A Green and Rosie Life said...

Lovely kitchen - what a difference!! 4 years is nothing for a job completed. Simon started on the kitchen in our first house and when we sold it 7 years later he gave the box of tiles tht needed to go up to the new owner. I wonder if he ever got them in place?

Rosie x

Anonymous said...

Ohhhhh...this post made me shiver. Like yours our kitchen hadn't been touched in years. Beige tiles with teapots. Check. Sudden frenzy one day and ripped them all of the walls. Check. Chipped formica cabinets. Check. Dodgy flooring that needed chipping off. Check. Four years until completed. Almost check....just finishing it now.

I only hope ours looks half as good when it's done.

You've done a fabulous job and made it look so beautiful.

xSteelx

Karen Sue said...

Needing to do the kitchen, but still waiting for the bathroom that was supposed to be done last summer. I'm not brave with plumbing, or I'd have done it myself!...and since the tub is coming out and it is in the back, it is silly for me to think about doing the vanity or the mirror myself. Bound to go wrong. I wanted it done before the snow flies....
How's that sink in your kitchen? I've admired them, but I have a double sing and don't know if I'd have enough room with one. You have inspired me, though! That and the drawer with the spoons and forks that falls abit every time it is pulled out now! Have to work out a plan!

Maureen said...

Hello, I haven't visited your blog for ages and I have missed so much ! your kitchen looks fab, your wedding pics look great CONGRATULATIONS to you both, and you look beautiful in your wedding finery. BORING ??? not at all, I find your posts, newsy and interesting. thanks for sharing your life with us.
M x