Houzz Top 10 Kitchens 2016
8 years ago
Featured Answer
Sort by:Oldest
Comments (19)
- 8 years ago
- 8 years ago
Related Discussions
Houzz - 10 most popular kitchens
Comments (38)I respectfully disagree, jterrilynn. I think it takes a lot of creativeness to do a white kitchen well. White is difficult and vague. Online pictures mean nothing when you're standing in your own space. One man's white can look grey or blue or yellow in another man's kitchen, depending on lighting and other factors. In college, I stayed with a well-to-do French family in Paris. I fell in love with their "classic" white cabinets, open shelving and glass front cabs, and white marble counters. It was a small kitchen, not ornate, but it just spoke to me. So that's what I drew my inspiration from in my new kitchen by picking a lot of white. That said, all my friends and family who did their kitchens 2-8 years ago did dark wood cabs with light or dark granite. I think their kitchens look great too! I just need a calm, light & airy feel, especially in a small house. And I do love creamy white like Donaleen. But the trim in the rest of our house is more of a pure white, and since I was merging the spaces I wanted continuity. And yup, gray cars everywhere here. Funny, I was just noticing that a few weeks ago! It would be fun to have some color in our cars, no?...See More10 x 10 Kitchen Inspiration Anyone?
Comments (17)We also have a smallish kitchen - it's about 9 x 13 with 3 doorways and two windows. Our house was built in 1926 and most of the cabinets are from the late 60's and full of handmade charm. One thing I found incredibly useful was ripping out a shallow (18") base cabinet with countertop and putting in a floor to ceiling 12" deep cabinet. We call it the "dish stack" and it holds all our dishes, mugs and glasses. We did it from necessity and ended up thinking it's our best idea. It opens up the entrance to the kitchen a little bit which the countertop corner used to impede. It's directly across from my dishwasher and has drastically reduced the time to unload the dishes. We are still in the process of remodeling, so no "after" pictures yet. I wouldn't really want a bigger kitchen. Just more storage....See MoreZillow Digs: Top Home Design Trends for 2016
Comments (34)Yes, dhygarden! I should have mentioned ebony and Madagascar rosewood in the same breath as ivory. I returned home in September from a year in Zambia doing research, and the elephant situation is dire. Zambia is one of the few African countries whose elephant population is not going down, but South Africa, who has the largest elephant population, has terrible problems with ivory poachers, even though they have a very aggressive program to stop them. As long as there is a market for ivory, the poachers will not stop. I spent time in an area where we had elephants and they are magnificent creatures. To kill them just to take the ivory is so... well, I could go on, but that's not the question at hand here. I usually don't have a problem downloading pictures or reading photo-heavy blogs, but Joni's was an exception. She could re-size them and make it a lot easier for her readers. I do have to say, other than the first picture of her daughter's table, which I thought was pretty neat, I didn't care for any of the others. That second picture, of the Veranda bedroom, was perfectly hideous, in my opinion. Looked like it reeked of Chanel and cigarettes and belonged to a high class madam. LOL Of course, just my opinion, someone else may think it's awesome! :-) I'm not sure the reports of the death of gray aren't greatly exaggerated. ;-) Maria Killam says gray is still "the neutral of the decade," and we're only halfway through the decade. A lot of people here on the gw forums are doing new kitchens and bathrooms as we speak in gray. Maybe it's not as popular to paint all the walls in the entire house in gray, but I think using gray is still quite acceptable. In my kitchen remodel, I'm doing all the cupboards/cabs in gray, the IKEA bodbyn in their SEKTIONS line. The counter will be black (I think, still deciding), the sink will be white farmhouse, the appliances black and stainless, the table and chairs white (eat-in kitchen), the back splash stacked rock, mostly gray but other tones too, the area rug under the table maroon with gray and white, window trim in maroon and wooden horizontal blinds in white. The wallpaper by the table/chairs will be a textured very, very light gray, almost white, and the floors will be vinyl planks hardwood look, grayish whiteish whitewashed. I don't feel like that's too much gray. (But I'd love anyone's input into the whole color scheme!) I doubt any of my friends will say, "Oh that gray is so last year!" Actually, none of my friends would ever say anything remotely like that, lol. I agree with violet west in that it's bold and daring to do a "permanent" fixture like a bathroom floor in a very bright color (or colors), but as she says, you'd better have the time, patience, and money to re-do them when that color starts to look pretty dated. I have a bright yellow sofa that's really a queen sized futon. But I can buy new covers for it for less than $100 on Amazon. Not that I have $100 to just throw around all the time. I ordered it with the yellow in 2011 and it's still yellow. I'm probably going to order a new cover in gray linen and get maroon throw pillow covers. My living room will have the same floor as the kitchen, as the LR, K, and DR are all one big great room. My accent wall will be stacked rock, just like the kitchen back splash. The area rug is a bigger version of the kitchen rug, maroon with white and gray. Same wallpaper on the one wall. I don't know what to do, if anything, about my chocolate brown recliner and loveseat. But then Maria Killam said yellow is hot this year, especially yellow sofas, LOL. Figures I'd be changing OUT of the yellow sofa the minute it becomes trendy, haha! But even though it might be fun to do, say, the bright yellow IKEA cupboards or a floor in primary colors, those are things I won't be able to afford to change, plus I think it's wasteful to rip up perfectly good stuff just because you want to be trend-setting. I'm confident my gray and white color scheme with pops of maroon will stand the test of time...and if not, who cares? :-) As long as I love it, that's all that matters. :-) Lana, well said. Monica, you did it right. People used to buy houses and pay them off. Unfortunately for my kids' generation *(genX), the crazy housing bubble taught them that houses are virtual ATM machines, sell every couple of years and buy something bigger and better. Of course, that all came crashing down in 2008. Now these kids in their mid-30's are stuck upside down in houses where they owe far more than they're worth. What Monica and her husband did was to pay off the loan early (easy if you just pay a little more than the minimum every month!), take out prudent equity loans to add on, rather than buy something bigger, pay the loans off. Now they're set for the rest of their lives in a home that they love, and it's theirs free and clear. Homes are still the best investment around IF you do it that way. Kudos to Monica and her DH! Lynn, I too really enjoy looking at pictures of other homes, even when they're not my cup of tea. I like seeing people's creativity in many different styles. I still think the bottom line is if YOU think it's beautiful, then it's beautiful. If YOU'RE happy, then who cares what Maria or Joni or anyone else thinks? You're the one living there day in and day out, and if your home makes you smile, that's all that matters. :-)...See MoreNightowl's 2016 Kitchen Reveal
Comments (67)Hello Kristine - I am just seeing your question. A year later and the walnut cutting board is still great. For logistics. The island has a wood support right where the marble and wood meet and also around the center of the board and of course the perimeter. So, when designing the island, the supports had to be added to the design. For installation, it was easy. I just had the marble cut short and they installed it. For the board, make sure the stone side is not finished as it needs to be a straight edge to butt up against the stone) The board is attached using L brackets I think every few inches on the perimeter and few around the center. It took a bit of work to make sure the board snugged right up to the marble when screwing it in, but it is totally fine. I initially thought I would need to add a bead of silicone, but never did. A year later and it looks the same as the day we put it in. It isn't a crumb catcher where the two edges meet, but I am not too messy. I can imagine it might be a drip problem if I was slaughtering hogs on it or something.......See MoreRelated Professionals
Agoura Hills Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · Greensboro Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · Hillsboro Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · Midvale Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · Pleasant Grove Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · Vineyard Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · Avondale Kitchen & Bathroom Remodelers · Bremerton Kitchen & Bathroom Remodelers · Galena Park Kitchen & Bathroom Remodelers · Luling Kitchen & Bathroom Remodelers · Daly City Cabinets & Cabinetry · Kaneohe Cabinets & Cabinetry · Prior Lake Cabinets & Cabinetry · Tenafly Cabinets & Cabinetry · Hermiston Tile and Stone Contractors- 8 years ago
- 8 years ago
- 8 years ago
- 8 years ago
- 8 years ago
- 8 years ago
- 8 years ago
- 8 years ago
- 8 years ago
- 8 years ago
- 8 years ago
- 8 years ago
- 8 years agolast modified: 8 years ago
- 8 years ago
- 8 years ago
- 8 years agolast modified: 8 years ago
Related Stories

LAUNDRY ROOMSTop 10 Trending Laundry Room Ideas on Houzz
Of all the laundry room photos uploaded to Houzz so far in 2016, these are the most popular. See why
Full Story
KITCHEN DESIGNIdeas From the Year’s Top 10 Kitchens of the Week
Get inspired by the found objects, reclaimed hardware, efficient storage and work zones in our top kitchens of 2016
Full Story
LAUNDRY ROOMSThe Top 10 Laundry Room Photos of 2016
Clothing rods and multiuse spaces show up in this year’s most popular laundry rooms on Houzz
Full Story
MOST POPULARThe Top 10 Houzz Articles of 2014
Get practical advice on kitchens, bathrooms, decorating, storage and more with the most viewed stories of the year
Full Story
ENTRYWAYSThe 10 Most Popular Entry Photos of 2016
Take a look and see if you saved any of these top entryways of the year
Full Story
KITCHEN DESIGNThe 10 Most Popular Kitchen Photos of 2016
Fall in love with classic styles and materials all over again — and see what’s cooking for the new year
Full Story
HOUZZ TOURSThe Top 10 Home Tours on Houzz
See the most popular homes from the 1,000 profiled on Houzz, from an edgy garage to a sparkling Southern belle
Full Story
HOUZZ TOURSThe Top 10 Houzz Tours of 2015
We invite you to revisit our most popular house tours from this past year
Full Story
BATHROOM DESIGNTop 10 Trending Bathroom Photos on Houzz
See the looks for the bathroom that Houzz users are saving to their ideabooks now
Full Story
WINE CELLARSTrending Now: Top 10 New Wine Cellars on Houzz
Whether you prefer white, red or rosé, these popular wine cellars will hit the spot
Full Story
User