Jun 14

My Parent’s Kitchen.

As a part of our massive family home overhaul, my parents completely gutted the kitchen and moved it to another spot in the house. This was the first kitchen I designed, and I wanted it to be perfect because my mom has tolerated our small, sad kitchen for the last 17 years. We knew we wanted something light and timeless, so I began by collecting images of beautiful white kitchens, and sketched out some rough plans on IKEA’s software to play with different layouts. I am obsessed space planning, so I considered every possible configuration to ensure that it was as functional and practical as possible. I then took those plans to a kitchen designer at Home Depot and she worked with me for hours to hash out every miniscule detail from cabinet dimensions,to appliance specifications, to drawer pulls and handles.

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This is where we planned to build the new kitchen. The door goes into the new garage, and the window looks onto our side yard.

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As a last minute decision, we decided against white cabinets because we thought they might be a little too ordinary. The cabinets are Thomasville in a color called Dover. It’s a soft, warm, pale gray.

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Ezekile and Diego painstakingly installed them with surgical precision.

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Drumroll please…………………….

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Brand new cabinets! Brand new appliances! Brand new everything!

CLICK HERE for more photos from this entry!

Posted by Jen at 2:38 pm — 1 comment
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Apr 18

Apartment Therapy’s Big Book of Small Spaces.

After a year-long wait, the book that my bedroom will be featured in is finally coming out on May 11th! I mentioned last year that my favorite blog, Apartment Therapy, came by and took some pictures for their new book.

Check out that entry here.

The book is done, and it looks like this! I’ve seen a few pages of the book and it looks amazing. This is not helping my obsession with tiny space planning. After it comes out, I’m going to do a full post on my tricked out mini-bedroom. (The photo on the cover is not my place)

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You can buy it on Amazon or if you want to preview the book, visit the official site.

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Apr 1

Family Home Renovation.

My dad has wanted to renovate our family home as long as I can remember. It was small and charming, but the kitchen was in the front, and while it’s nice to be able to see kids scampering out front, it was a bit of an eyesore when we were preparing food or eating.

At first the plan was just to renovate the kitchen, which was in dire need of a facelift. And then we wanted to move the kitchen to the side of the house. And then we wanted to move the kitchen to the back of the house.

Fast forward 7 years and my parents finally decided to keep the kitchen in roughly the same area, add a brand new garage in front of the kitchen, and turn the old garage into a new living room. Unlike most extensions that get added onto the back of the house, we decided to add onto the front. I figured it’s not often you get to reinvent the façade of a house, so it better be nice.

I’m not a expert at designing traditional house exteriors, so I spent weeks looking at thousands of images online and in books. I even drove through San Mateo, Hillsborough, Berkeley, and Pacific Heights with my camera, taking pictures of beautiful houses. I’m sure I looked like a stalker. Or one of those undercover agents on “Cheaters.”

I was in California from October – December ’09 working on what turned out to be a SUPER HUGE MEGA renovation.

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This is the state the house was in when my parents called me for help. At that point my dad had already gutted the entire house, putting in new plumbing, electrical, sewer lines, and lots of other things that I don’t know the terminology for. The shape of the house changed, so the whole roof is new. My parents endured two massive floods when they were hit by unexpected rain storms, pending the completion of the new roof.

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The entire house was behind a green construction fence for many, many months. During this entire process, my parents were still living IN the house.

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Both bathrooms in the house were demolished with plans to turn them into one larger bathroom. The kitchen was gutted, and a makeshift “kitchen” was set up in the back yard. It consisted of a sink with no hot water, a plywood countertop, and a propane camping stove. My dad parked our trusty 1980’s RV in our side yard, and they called it home for over 6 months. The RV is surprisingly spacious and comfortable for 2 people. When I came home, I stayed in my childhood room and because there was no front door and no garage door yet, the whole house was like an ice box. We probably had raccoons cruising the premises at night.

CLICK HERE for more photos from this entry!

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Feb 10

Shades of Hope on the OWN Network

Last summer I got to travel to a tiny town in Texas to design a set for a new show on the Oprah Winfrey Network. My job was to turn a former restaurant into an annex facility for Shades of Hope, a treatment center that specializes in treatment of eating disorders and co-occurring addictions. The center is owned and operated by the McCarty family, a close-knit clan of funny, warm, and welcoming people whom I worked with very closely during my month long stay in Buffalo Gap, (population: 493).
I have always been drawn to the old-world aspects of the south. The Texan country is quiet and beautiful, perfect for photographing crunchy gravel roads, friendly farm animals, and spectacular sunsets. Check out the photos that I blogged last year. Revisiting those photos makes me nostalgic; I need to go back. I didn’t have time to ride a horse.
This was definitely one of my favorite projects to date. Work-travel is the ideal because I get to spend extended periods of time exploring new terrain, but I feel like I have purpose. I really enjoy making things beautiful as well as utilitarian so I loved reconceptualizing the function of each space and outfitting it with everything needed to make it a functioning workplace. I was kind of a one person Art Department on this one, but I had so much support from the staff at Shades and the extra handy locals. Oh, and my fabulous PA, Jordan!
pin it!The building itself had a lot of charm and great details and the lush foliage really brought it to life. I forgot to photograph the peach tree in the backyard from which I ate sun-ripened, warm peachs every single day. Amazing. 
pin it!Exterior before.
 
Entry/lounge. It was fun decorating in a style very different from my own. 
 
I used my own photos as art! 
pin it!Entry/lounge Before.
 
pin it!Buffalo Gap looks pretty much  looks just like that painting. But I didn’t see any buffalo.
pin it!Dining room before.
 
pin it!Staff office. It was an empty, dusty bungalow when I arrived. I turned it into a sort of administrative headquarters. I will never forget this crazy orange color. It’s called Starfish :)
Staff office before.
pin it!This was the Therapy Room aka Kim’s office.  I dont have before pictures, but it was also a dusty white bungalow. I think this is my favorite room. The color is a warm, earthy taupe that I custom mixed. All of the beautiful artifacts and art were taken from Kim’s home, an amazing church converted into a loft style home. 
 
Big shout out to all the McCartys and the Tijuana Entertainment family. The 8 episode series already aired, but you can catch some episodes of Addicted to Food on the website.
Posted by Jen at 3:22 pm — 2 comments
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