I am both fascinated and challenged by the notion of a small kitchen. My past kitchens have been spacious … room for tables and chairs and big things like “islands”. But having moved to California’s Peninsula where space comes at a very hefty price, the kitchen I was destined to own was going to be extremely small. This notion was born out when we closed on a 600 square foot bungalow from the 1920’s.
Here’s where we started…
Two behemoth appliances… one that made it tough to get out the back door; old cabinets and a deep, dark hole of a pantry with louvered doors.
I do want to preface this whole post by saying that I love to cook. Eating out for me, especially now, is a not-too-often thing… mostly because I really do like eating what I’ve cooked. So I’m not the person that stores her shoes in the oven or keeps just a bottle of milk in the refrigerator and a can of tuna in the pantry.
I should also tell you that not only did the bungalow have no closets (at all… and that’s another blog post), it had no washer/dryer. Having no illusions of spending hours in the laundromat every few days., I knew I had to scare up space somewhere for those appliances and other than the living room (now there’s a novel idea), the kitchen was the only place.
Here’s the conversation I was having in my head as I undertook the project:
What’s the vibe of the house?
I channeled the nursery rhyme of the teeny tiny lady and the teeny tiny tea kettle. In my mind her house was eclectic, and layered with treasures that occupied shelves and randomly placed surfaces. The kitchen would follow this overall vibe. It wasn’t big and spacious for a sparse look, it needed to be more like a European flat in a prewar building, with color and pattern and lots of things exposed to view.
Yikes, for all these little, broken up spaces, I need custom cabinets! How does that work on a small budget?
Ikea to the rescue. I stuck with under the counter cabinets only to give the illusion of more space in the room, and then got two tall cabinets with shelves and drawers for pantry items, pots, pans, and plates.