Anonymous wrote:Take down some uppers and replace with open shelving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
These links are very misleading. The issue with those honey oak kitchens that homebuyers now hate is not the color, as much as the style and quality of cabinets. In all her "inspo" pictures, the oak cabinets happen to be not the 1990s Home Depot special. If your oak cabinets are shaker or European style flat fronts, or it's the beautiful tiger oak, you have lots more space for maneuver.
OP, your only choices are really accessories, hardware, lighting, repainting the walls and adding floor coverings. I personally don't like rugs or floor mats in the kitchen, but some people say it's very practical. Depending on what's currently there, a new backsplash might be a possibility.
That’s a fair point re: the second link, but the first link that shows actual reader kitchens does include kitchens with oak cabinets with the outdated arched doors, etc., and includes suggestions like paint, hardware, floor coverings, etc. I agree that making the suggested changes won’t look like the “inspo” from the first link, unless doors are changed, but it would refresh and make them somewhat less dated.
Anonymous wrote:
These links are very misleading. The issue with those honey oak kitchens that homebuyers now hate is not the color, as much as the style and quality of cabinets. In all her "inspo" pictures, the oak cabinets happen to be not the 1990s Home Depot special. If your oak cabinets are shaker or European style flat fronts, or it's the beautiful tiger oak, you have lots more space for maneuver.
OP, your only choices are really accessories, hardware, lighting, repainting the walls and adding floor coverings. I personally don't like rugs or floor mats in the kitchen, but some people say it's very practical. Depending on what's currently there, a new backsplash might be a possibility.