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Our Lockdown Kitchen Makeover

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Five years ago Stonecroft was featured in Your Home magazine (see HERE). In recent times the white walls were starting to look dingy and depressing making us wonder what on earth possessed us to paint the most used room in the house such an impractical colour. We'd talked about redecorating for ages but somehow never found the time until lockdown presented us with the perfect opportunity to get stuck in.

 
I think it was Mei who'd left a comment suggesting Jon and I recreate Colin's photo once we'd finished the kitchen...well, today's the day and of course, we've still got the same clothes five years on.


Inspired by a Victorian autopsy room I'd fallen in love with in a TV series, we'd decided to paint the walls in a heritage green. Normally we'd have had the paint custom mixed but due to lockdown there was a nationwide paint shortage and the only company with any stock available was posh British paint manufacturer, Farrow & Ball and even then there was a four week waiting list. The price of a 5 litre tin of Arsenic brought tears to our eyes but it was the perfect shade and the quality was so good that we only needed one coat on the walls. 


As it was lockdown we didn't have access to DIY shops or salvage yards so we had to make do with what we had lying around. Thank goodness we're hoarders! The cupboard in the photo above was bog standard laminate bought from Ikea's Bargain Corner over a decade ago. Jon cut up an old wooden pallet someone had kindly dumped over the garden wall to clad the front and sides and salvaged the legs from our old Rajasthani coffee table to hide the ugly metal feet. We had some turquoise emulsion lurking in the depths of the coal house which I mixed with baking power to make chalk paint. I applied a couple of coats to the wood, then sanded and waxed it, giving us the distressed finish we both love. The brass peacock handles were an impulse buy from a roadside stall in Goa a couple of years ago.

Jon replaced the old worktop with the top of the old coffee table. Browsing a tile website we both fell for the textured marine blue tiles and were able to order them on line and have them delivered. We'd already got some coloured grout leftover from when Jon tiled the lounge fireplace. The shelves were originally part of a Victorian cupboard which Jon cut to size and waxed last week, we bought the Singer brackets online.

Another online purchase was a few metres of textured apple green vinyl from a car upholstery supplier I found on eBay. We repainted the 1930s kitchen chairs which we'd inherited from Jon's mum and recovered the seat pads. 


Our off-white retro fridge packed up last year and we replaced it with this Bush model. The black one was half the price of the other colours and lucky for us, it was the one we liked best.


I'm sure you'll remember me painting this Victorian glazed shop cupboard back in the summer. It cost us £5 from a car boot sale and used to be white. It hung on the opposite wall for years. I revamped it with the same Farrow & Ball Arsenic paint and painted the inside with blackboard paint from our paint stash.


The freestanding cupboard was originally the base of one of those orange pine Welsh dressers that were all the rage in the '70s. It belonged to Jon's grandparents and followed us from our previous house (the top part hangs on the wall in the utility room). We gave it a lick of paint and Jon added a new top using wood from the woodpile, staining and waxing it. The drawers are Edwardian and made from old Cadbury's & Fry's Chocolate packing crates. They were a car boot sale find years ago and cost a couple of quid. I stained and waxed it but not too carefully, I hate old things to look new.



The Edwardian wine rack, another car boot buy, also got a chalk paint makeover. 




When we bought Stonecroft there were two recesses which we decided to knock into a single, larger one. We used a reclaimed railway sleeper as a mantle shelf.  There's spotlights and an extractor fan behind.




Jon built the corner cupboard using the doors from the aforementioned Victorian cupboard and some handles from a broken 1930s dressing table that was used as firewood years ago. The architrave came from Liz & Al's wood pile. This too was painted in the same Arsenic paint.


The shelves are also planks of wood salvaged from the Victorian cupboard. There's the Moghul inspired shelf Sarah made for us, isn't it a perfect match?





The shelves were once part our Rajasthani coffee table.



The glass pedant lamps were an online purchase.


The brand new bespoke Belfast sink unit was an eBay bargain years ago, the seller had changed their minds about the style of kitchen they wanted and just wanted rid. The brass taps were a car boot sale find as were the black porcelain knobs.


Ignore all the junk on the top of our larder, an antique Hungarian cupboard, Jon refused to move it just for a blog photo!  This came from a junk shop in Walsall ages ago.


Check out my spice rack, a vintage Indian bread tray I'd originally bought as a present for a friend but decided I couldn't live without it! 



My DIY kitchen clock! In Colin's photo it was advertising Corona beer (not the most appropriate thing to have in these strange times!) I spray painted the silver frame a metallic champagne gold with a can I found lurking at the back of the cupboard and, using the old picture as a template, I cut around a laminated image of Bollywood goddess, Helen, from the legendary 1967 movie Jewel Thief, which I'd bought from a flea market in India donkey's years ago.

 VIX: Vintage Krist Gudman of San Francisco patchwork maxi (gift from ex-blogger Krista), silver ankle boots (La Redoute, 2016), 1960s copper & turquoise pendant (inherited from Mum)  JON: Diesel Black Label waistcoat, vintage pin striped wool trousers, 1970s tooled leather belt, Jiggler Lord Berlue shirt (all charity shopped)

Our online purchases were the pendant lights, tiles, Arsenic paint, shelf brackets and green vinyl, everything else was salvaged, repurposed and revamped using stuff we already owned. Our kitchen will forever remind us of lockdown!

Stay safe & see you soon.



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