Five Easy Ways Lighting Can Bring New Life To Your Kitchen!

Kitchen lighting

Make your ordinary kitchen look extraordinary with these simple lighting changes.

  1. Install dimmers on all your lights. This allows you to adjust light levels, create drama, reduce energy costs and extend bulb life.
  2. Install a new island light, rail system or multiple mini pendants over the counter or island. There are many spectacular design options that can really add new life to your kitchen. It’s like jewelry for the home!
  3. If you have recessed lighting, updating the trims and bulbs can have a big impact on the lighting effect in your kitchen. 
  4. Installing linear light sources under and over your cabinets as well as under toe kicks along the floor can make the kitchen appear bigger and make your backsplash, counters and floors really pop!
  5. Selecting just the right chandelier or a decorative ceiling fan with a light for the kitchen table can add the final element to a well-thought-out lighting plan for your new or old kitchen.

To learn more about how lighting can illuminate and accentuate your home, visit 1-800lighting.com.


Hunter Douglas Blinds

Shades Of Green

Saving energy is in style these days and there are fashionable ways to go green at home while still saving some green for yourself.

At the window, try NewStyle® hybrid shutters, which are from Hunter Douglas. They are not only stylish and reasonably priced but highly energy efficient, with the ability to resist cold air in the winter and solar heat in the summer. The UltraGrain™ finish makes them the only hybrid shutters to offer the attractive color and grain pattern of real stained wood.
Plus, the shutters are GREENGUARD Indoor Air Certified® and backed by a lifetime guarantee.

For more information, visit hunterdouglas.com or call 800.274.2985.

 

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Community News for Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Northeast Phoenix, Carefree, Cave Creek and surrounding areas.

CITYSunTimes Web Exclusives November 2010 | Read the full SECTION


Waiting can be the hardest thing to do

I had the pleasure of doing a consultation for a new client that came to me through this column. Touring the home, I had a strange feeling of disconnection between the home, the furnishings and the people. I learned they had just moved in a month earlier and were still getting used to their new surroundings.
The canvas of the house – the paint on the walls and the floor coverings – were chosen by the previous owner. The new family brought their furniture and accessories into the home, and the two styles had no relationship to each other and didn’t work together.
The wife was aware of this, and was anxious to get started making the changes necessary to express her style in her new home. She had a strong heritage which she expressed through her furniture and accessories from her previous home. It was also very important for her to put her heart into her home.
Her husband had some different ideas that she believed were in conflict with hers. Fortunately, he was able to join us and we were able to work through the differences. He had also just moved into a new office and was feeling the discomfort of change there, too.
Although their styles were different, their goals were the same, and they both craved feeling the essence of their family that they wanted to create together in their new home. I call this 1+1=3. Joining two people with different tastes can result in an outcome that is unique and special for them.
Before giving suggestions, I needed a sense about how they each wanted to live. To my surprise, I found myself struggling and wondered why. After asking many questions, we all realized that they were not sure what they wanted or how they wanted to set up the home for their family and personal living.
After reviewing their options and design possibilities, I suggested they wait about three months from the time they moved into the house before making any decisions.
With the holidays approaching, it would be a wonderful opportunity to experience the home with family and friends. Waiting would help determine how the house worked for them, what they liked best and what was missing. They were very relieved not to have to make any decisions when they did not feel ready to do so.
Most often, clients hate to hear that it’s best to wait. It can be the most difficult thing to do and it can also be the most rewarding. This way, you are sure to make decisions from a place of knowing, experience and not having to guess as to the outcome. The results will be what you really need and want.
It takes time to come to understand a new environment and how you fit into it. Since each space affects us differently, we need to tune in to our sensitivities and reactions. Houses may not have feelings, yet they have a definite structure that dictates how to combine styles, colors, textures and shapes. We have to see how we relate and can function in those parameters. If we can’t, we have to look at why and see what changes have to be made to give us comfort and connection in our homes.
Remember, rooms have no feelings, YOU do!


Barbara Kaplan

 

Barbara Kaplan, IFDA, ASID Allied member, helps people express their “interiors” through interior design and is the author of The Bajaro Method: Rooms Have No Feelings, YOU Do!
To contact Barbara, call 480.998.5088, send an e-mail to barbara@barbarakaplan.com or visit barbarakaplan.com.

 


CITYLife Web Exclusive | CITYSunTimes November 2010

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