Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are you located? We can suggest good kitchen designers depending where you are. Do not, under any circumstance, move forward with a reno you aren’t at least 90% happy with.
We are in Fairfax. Would LOVE designer recommendations!
New poster here... we have redone two kitchens (in Burke/FFX area) with Cameo Kitchens and I think they do stellar work. They are a little more pricey than the average, but their service, scheduling and work is top notch. I'd recommend giving them a try. FWIW, we did not change the footprint of the kitchens (sink in the same place, dishwasher same place, stove same place... but in both cases we did move a fridge and end up with more cabinetry than before.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are you located? We can suggest good kitchen designers depending where you are. Do not, under any circumstance, move forward with a reno you aren’t at least 90% happy with.
We are in Fairfax. Would LOVE designer recommendations!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is nothing wrong with LVP. They are easy to care for and pretty durable with little effort.
OP, I would reconsider open shelving. We have it now and things that don’t get used daily, get dusty pretty quick. Maybe just do open shelving in a small area.
Yeah but it’s going to look terrible. Worse if OP only puts it in the kitchen, but still bad if it’s on the whole level,
Have you ever seen it in person at a real flooring store ( not hd)? It has come leaps and bounds from the old vinyl flooring of the past. Plus, it is easy to care for. Don’t discount that last point. Who wants to spend time cleaning floors!
Yes, OP here, I agree. I honestly can't tell the difference. For business, I was recently visiting a beautiful old building with a grand ballroom, and between the manager and myself we just couldn't figure out if they were real hardwood or LVP. I mean, we were jumping on them, touching them, trying to see if the pattern repeated (we didn't want to give them a "scratch test"). They did in fact turn out to be LVP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is nothing wrong with LVP. They are easy to care for and pretty durable with little effort.
OP, I would reconsider open shelving. We have it now and things that don’t get used daily, get dusty pretty quick. Maybe just do open shelving in a small area.
Yeah but it’s going to look terrible. Worse if OP only puts it in the kitchen, but still bad if it’s on the whole level,
Have you ever seen it in person at a real flooring store ( not hd)? It has come leaps and bounds from the old vinyl flooring of the past. Plus, it is easy to care for. Don’t discount that last point. Who wants to spend time cleaning floors!
Anonymous wrote:Immediately write a deposit check for the contractor who wouldn't do "luxury" vinyl floors.
Why would you want vinyl floors in your house?
It's wild that a slight rebranding of a bad product is working.
Would you buy vinyl siding and vinyl windows if you didn't have to?
Maybe that's next, LVS and LVW.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is nothing wrong with LVP. They are easy to care for and pretty durable with little effort.
OP, I would reconsider open shelving. We have it now and things that don’t get used daily, get dusty pretty quick. Maybe just do open shelving in a small area.
Yeah but it’s going to look terrible. Worse if OP only puts it in the kitchen, but still bad if it’s on the whole level,
Have you ever seen it in person at a real flooring store ( not hd)? It has come leaps and bounds from the old vinyl flooring of the past. Plus, it is easy to care for. Don’t discount that last point. Who wants to spend time cleaning floors!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are you located? We can suggest good kitchen designers depending where you are. Do not, under any circumstance, move forward with a reno you aren’t at least 90% happy with.
+1
OP what you are looking for is a kitchen designer.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like a broken record here, but try Cabinet Discounters for cabinets. We got very nice, custom, inset cabinets for around $11,000 vs. $23,000 for the same thing from the next lowest bidder. Their on-staff kitchen designer (included in the cabinet price) did a great job figuring out what to put where and was super-responsive to our wishes.
Anonymous wrote:Where are you located? We can suggest good kitchen designers depending where you are. Do not, under any circumstance, move forward with a reno you aren’t at least 90% happy with.
Anonymous wrote:IKEA is not a bad idea.
Open shelving is a terrible idea. So is LVP.
Anonymous wrote:Where are you located? We can suggest good kitchen designers depending where you are. Do not, under any circumstance, move forward with a reno you aren’t at least 90% happy with.