Do big kitchens make us eat more?
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Do I live with it and get over it or do I make a big stink??
Comments (9)granite warping: I have a slab right now with that problem: came from factor that way! Customer WAY not happy: It's not our fault: how would our fabricator know before install. I am dealing with one hugh slab 133x79: giallo antico: and factor didn't cut slab even: that sounds like warping as you are having same problem. We filed a claim and they are "grinding down the granite in the uneven areas". It's not fun for the customer of course! (seams won't match up evenly: not by my fabricators' own error) We are not dealing with 2 slabs, but only one: cut wrong by a machine before it ever gets to our fabricator. So: the fact that they DID not POINT out SEAMS at templating: Unprofessional! Sneaky! My fabricator hates drama: so he says: "Hey mr customer : this is where I am putting your seam" IF they are mad: of course they call me screaming. Then I say "mr customer: you have to buy a new slab to avoid seams" Brushed is more expensive I believe. And you are probably dealing with an installer that is small time: or low to no overhead. I am guessing. What can you do? Keep complaining: ask them to grind down those areas that stick up. (could be a problem down the road) and or ask for a discount. *question : where your seam is: If you open up your cabinet below: is the seam on a reinforced area where two cabinets come together and there is double wood running up and down? (does that make sense?) Did he try to tell you that your cabinets were not level??? FYI: one mnth ago: I had to tell a customer they had to buy another slab: they wanted to add sf to the bar area: well they didn't want to spend $1000 more to revise estimate: that was only the price for the slab and freight. They had to pay only $12 more per sf for the added sf: that's cheap! They still didn't want to do that. So: they left their bar / island as orignally planned. Always good to be upfront and communicate. ~Best wishes: try to post a picture: there are plenty of experts on here: Bill! great advice from him! You got a great deal: but you should have to have UNEVEN slabs of rock! post a picture: that is worth a thousand words! Your situation could be simular....See MoreEat-in kitchen: do you eat at an island? Do you like it?
Comments (41)Before we remodel we struggled w/ this issue. In the end we made a bigger investment so that we could eat at a table & have an island. I am very glad we did. I almost always choose to have our family dinner at the table-- it seems so much more civilized and relaxed and an improtant time for our family of four to be/dine together -- which is only 3-4 times a week. When we sit at the table there have been so many improtant discussions that take place. They are critcal teaching moments for our teenage children. Also I am a stickler for table manners & it is hard to do that the island. Lunch & Breakfast happens at the island. FYI- We increased the kitchen floor plan byremoving diningroom wall & absorbing that space into our kichen plan. The dining room furniture then moved to share space with our oversized living room. Two years later- I am sooo happy we did this....See MoreBig Family Kitchen - Help us refine our dreams!
Comments (14)Speaking to my own personal situation, now that my kids are older, they are often preparing their own meals (breakfast/lunch) when I'm in the kitchen. We have filtered water in the fridge door as well as at the sink. In the late afternoons, I might be prepping dinner and someone needs to fill a thermos of water for sports practice. Can't use the fridge for that, but then I'm in the way prepping dinner by the sink when they need to get to the sink water dispenser. Or, I'm making dinner and someone is helping. I'm a clean up as you go type, so if I'm trying to clean a bowl I just used while my daughter is trying to rinse vegetables for the salad she's making for dinner....congestion again at the sink. Or I'm in the middle of cleaning up from making morning meals while one of the kids is trying to get to the sink to dump the little bit of milk/cereal down the disposal b/f putting the bowl in the dishwasher. Just little things like that. Also, dh and I sometimes cook together - having two sinks would be a huge help there. He might be trying to cut open a package of meat to grill and I'm trying to rinse vegetables for the side dish, or dump a hot pot of water, etc. With a big family, as they get older, their presence in the kitchen is much more noticeable rather than when they were younger and I made/prepped everything myself. Honestly, having one sink was never an issue until I had four pre-teen/teens. So you may not see a need for it now, but with four kids and plans for more, I couldn't imagine having only one sink if I were planning a new kitchen and had a choice....See MoreBig Kitchen and more space in general...would you move to have it?
Comments (48)I'm sure it must depend on the stage of life one is currently in. I live in a 1200 square foot farmhouse with my husband and four small children. We have very large parties with three or four other families with small children several times a month. We host all the major holidays and have a growing extended family. I literally cannot fit all the people in my house. There is nowhere to sit. There are bottlenecks in the kitchen, bathroom, and entrance areas. Usually, the children and toddlers outnumber the adults 3 or 4 - 1, and they are so loud and so boisterous that the adults can have no peace unless the kids are all outside. Since we are in California, most of the time our parties spill out into the yard and that works great because the weather is usually beautiful. But Dec-Jan and July-Aug are tough. We are building a house on a 5 acre lot right in the middle of town, and it will have a large kitchen and several large rooms for entertaining. Sometimes I worry that it will be hard to take care of, because I am used to cleaning and caring for a 2bd 1bath tiny little house. But my kitchen right now is 10x10, and I have 48" of available countertop on one side, and 5' of countertop on the other. My husband cooks as much as I do, and he loves to get all the kids in there cooking and helping him. I have a hard time being in the kitchen when everyone else is in there too. It's just too crowded and loud and I like to have everything orderly and clean before I begin cooking. I am planning a large kitchen- 15x24 or so with a small eating area included- so my husband can have one side and I can cook on the other and we don't run into each other and I don't have to clean up his mess before I start cooking. I agree that large kitchens cause the cook to walk farther and, because of the space between stations, some efficiency is sacrificed. It is true that my tiny galley kitchen is very efficient, if by efficiency you mean not having to move much to reach everything. But in my current kitchen I trip over kids and my husband and the dog and the dishes and on and on every time I turn around. I'm thinking maybe inefficiency in the form of large aisles and lots of space would be heavenly. I plan to glass in one of the porches off the kitchen and make that into a pantry/summer kitchen where my husband can make his ginger beer and fermented stuff and I can do canning and vegetable washing and large crop/batch cooking and seed starting. My in-laws are in the downsizing phase and they warn me that the extra room I am planning in my new house will be an expensive, uneccesary burden. But again, how much of the "downsizing" craze is fueled by retired people with no children left in the home? My new house will be 1700 square feet of entertaining space on the main floor, with another 1000 square feet or so of covered porches. We will put all the bedrooms in the upstairs half-story. If we need additional kid space, I will have a daylight basement that can also be finished eventually. I did design a main floor study/bath combo that can be turned into a master suite should we ever need one on the main floor. Maybe I will get in my new house and realize that it is too big. But if so I can just not finish the basement or parts of the second floor. But it would be nice to have that problem as opposed to the space limitations that I have now....See MoreRelated Professionals
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