Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Painted cabinets have always been considered less desirable. Perhaps a beach house in the Hamptons could get away with white painted ones, but not many other places.
Just a note to think about.
In the $1-2M price range it’s rare to see a home with wood stained cabinets.
Yeah, but in higher end homes it's rare to find painted cabinets.
The reason is painted cabinets are "popular" in lower end builds now because that allows builders and cabinet sellers to get away with selling cheap pre-fab compressed wood pulp/etc. cabinets. Engineered boards with a cheap veneer.
Higher end cabinets use real wood and stained coated finishes or even higher end using hand rubbed oil finishes.
This.
In Bethesda, Potomac, McLean or Great Falls, all hardwood cabinets are in the kitchens of the majority of homes even below $2M. Yes, as always exceptions do exist. The color of the stain will vary. The wood might be oak, maple, or something else. Most often, the cabinet style aligns with the architecture of the house overall.
Are these not painted cabinets?
https://redf.in/uSh7nj
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Painted cabinets have always been considered less desirable. Perhaps a beach house in the Hamptons could get away with white painted ones, but not many other places.
Just a note to think about.
In the $1-2M price range it’s rare to see a home with wood stained cabinets.
Yeah, but in higher end homes it's rare to find painted cabinets.
The reason is painted cabinets are "popular" in lower end builds now because that allows builders and cabinet sellers to get away with selling cheap pre-fab compressed wood pulp/etc. cabinets. Engineered boards with a cheap veneer.
Higher end cabinets use real wood and stained coated finishes or even higher end using hand rubbed oil finishes.
This.
In Bethesda, Potomac, McLean or Great Falls, all hardwood cabinets are in the kitchens of the majority of homes even below $2M. Yes, as always exceptions do exist. The color of the stain will vary. The wood might be oak, maple, or something else. Most often, the cabinet style aligns with the architecture of the house overall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Painted cabinets have always been considered less desirable. Perhaps a beach house in the Hamptons could get away with white painted ones, but not many other places.
Just a note to think about.
In the $1-2M price range it’s rare to see a home with wood stained cabinets.
Yeah, but in higher end homes it's rare to find painted cabinets.
The reason is painted cabinets are "popular" in lower end builds now because that allows builders and cabinet sellers to get away with selling cheap pre-fab compressed wood pulp/etc. cabinets. Engineered boards with a cheap veneer.
Higher end cabinets use real wood and stained coated finishes or even higher end using hand rubbed oil finishes.
This is such a strange statement. I follow plenty of high end designers on IG and truly wealthy people. Not Kardashain wealthy, but true old money wealth. Many of them have stained cabinets.
For example - Annie Meyer’s house “this oak house” on IG. She has impeccable taste and the money to go along with it. Painted cabinets.
I do not know any old money with painted cabinets, except in a summer beach cottage. Stained hardwood cabinets are all I see in their main homes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Painted cabinets have always been considered less desirable. Perhaps a beach house in the Hamptons could get away with white painted ones, but not many other places.
Just a note to think about.
In the $1-2M price range it’s rare to see a home with wood stained cabinets.
Yeah, but in higher end homes it's rare to find painted cabinets.
The reason is painted cabinets are "popular" in lower end builds now because that allows builders and cabinet sellers to get away with selling cheap pre-fab compressed wood pulp/etc. cabinets. Engineered boards with a cheap veneer.
Higher end cabinets use real wood and stained coated finishes or even higher end using hand rubbed oil finishes.
This is such a strange statement. I follow plenty of high end designers on IG and truly wealthy people. Not Kardashain wealthy, but true old money wealth. Many of them have stained cabinets.
For example - Annie Meyer’s house “this oak house” on IG. She has impeccable taste and the money to go along with it. Painted cabinets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Painted cabinets have always been considered less desirable. Perhaps a beach house in the Hamptons could get away with white painted ones, but not many other places.
Just a note to think about.
In the $1-2M price range it’s rare to see a home with wood stained cabinets.
Yeah, but in higher end homes it's rare to find painted cabinets.
The reason is painted cabinets are "popular" in lower end builds now because that allows builders and cabinet sellers to get away with selling cheap pre-fab compressed wood pulp/etc. cabinets. Engineered boards with a cheap veneer.
Higher end cabinets use real wood and stained coated finishes or even higher end using hand rubbed oil finishes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Painted cabinets have always been considered less desirable. Perhaps a beach house in the Hamptons could get away with white painted ones, but not many other places.
Just a note to think about.
In the $1-2M price range it’s rare to see a home with wood stained cabinets.
Yeah, but in higher end homes it's rare to find painted cabinets.
The reason is painted cabinets are "popular" in lower end builds now because that allows builders and cabinet sellers to get away with selling cheap pre-fab compressed wood pulp/etc. cabinets. Engineered boards with a cheap veneer.
Higher end cabinets use real wood and stained coated finishes or even higher end using hand rubbed oil finishes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, it’s not a “transitional.” That’s not a thing. Transitioning from what to what? That’s just a word Home Depot made up to describe a broad category of limited ornamentation. Which is fine I mean all of these terms are made up in some sense. But it won’t be enough for you to be able to make consistent design choices.
This is not my home but a recently sold home in my neighborhood and a similar model to my home. It's colonial-ish but it's not strictly colonial by a classic definition. This is also a pretty typical example of the type of kitchen remodels my area is seeing. This is basically the wood flooring I have too. Should I just go with something like this? Like I said, I'm not trying to win any design awards. When people enter my home, I just want it to look properly and reasonably maintained for the price point. That is all.
I'm honestly not that concerned about resale. By the time we sell, even the updates we do will be 10+ years old. That said, I just don't want it to look quickly dated in 2 years.
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/47567-Major-Beckham-Way-Sterling-VA-20165/12370711_zpid/?mmlb=g,24
Anonymous wrote:The kitchen we did for an heir of a liquor fortune used industrial science lab equipment. It all had to be customized to fit though and thus very expensive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Painted cabinets have always been considered less desirable. Perhaps a beach house in the Hamptons could get away with white painted ones, but not many other places.
Just a note to think about.
In the $1-2M price range it’s rare to see a home with wood stained cabinets.
Yeah, but in higher end homes it's rare to find painted cabinets.
The reason is painted cabinets are "popular" in lower end builds now because that allows builders and cabinet sellers to get away with selling cheap pre-fab compressed wood pulp/etc. cabinets. Engineered boards with a cheap veneer.
Higher end cabinets use real wood and stained coated finishes or even higher end using hand rubbed oil finishes.
Anonymous wrote:Also, it’s not a “transitional.” That’s not a thing. Transitioning from what to what? That’s just a word Home Depot made up to describe a broad category of limited ornamentation. Which is fine I mean all of these terms are made up in some sense. But it won’t be enough for you to be able to make consistent design choices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Painted cabinets have always been considered less desirable. Perhaps a beach house in the Hamptons could get away with white painted ones, but not many other places.
Just a note to think about.
In the $1-2M price range it’s rare to see a home with wood stained cabinets.
Yeah, but in higher end homes it's rare to find painted cabinets.
The reason is painted cabinets are "popular" in lower end builds now because that allows builders and cabinet sellers to get away with selling cheap pre-fab compressed wood pulp/etc. cabinets. Engineered boards with a cheap veneer.
Higher end cabinets use real wood and stained coated finishes or even higher end using hand rubbed oil finishes.