Cloakroom with Medium Wood Cabinets and Grey Walls Ideas and Designs
Refine by:
Budget
Sort by:Popular Today
1 - 20 of 600 photos
Item 1 of 3
Welcome Renovation
Bel Air - Serene Elegance. This collection was designed with cool tones and spa-like qualities to create a space that is timeless and forever elegant.
Cabinetry by Better Bilt
Cabinetry: Showplace EVO
Style: Savannah w/ FPH
Finish: Maple Cashew
Hardware: Hardware Resources Belcastel in Distressed Antique Silver
NJ Kitchens and Baths
Customer requested a simplistic, european style powder room. The powder room consists of a vessel sink, quartz countertop on top of a contemporary style vanity. The toilet has a skirted trapway, which creates a sleek design. A mosaic style floor tile helps bring together a simplistic look with lots of character.
Amish Custom Kitchens
Solid rustic hickory doors with horizontal grain on floating vanity with stone vessel sink.
Photographer - Luke Cebulak
Schoener
The room was very small so we had to install a countertop that bumped out from the corner, so a live edge piece with a natural branch formation was perfect! Custom designed live edge countertop from local wood company Meyer Wells. Dark concrete porcelain floor. Chevron glass backsplash wall. Duravit sink w/ Aquabrass faucet. Picture frame wallpaper that you can actually draw on.
Nautilus Architects
Cathedral ceilings and seamless cabinetry complement this home’s river view.
The low ceilings in this ’70s contemporary were a nagging issue for the 6-foot-8 homeowner. Plus, drab interiors failed to do justice to the home’s Connecticut River view.
By raising ceilings and removing non-load-bearing partitions, architect Christopher Arelt was able to create a cathedral-within-a-cathedral structure in the kitchen, dining and living area. Decorative mahogany rafters open the space’s height, introduce a warmer palette and create a welcoming framework for light.
The homeowner, a Frank Lloyd Wright fan, wanted to emulate the famed architect’s use of reddish-brown concrete floors, and the result further warmed the interior. “Concrete has a connotation of cold and industrial but can be just the opposite,” explains Arelt. Clunky European hardware was replaced by hidden pivot hinges, and outside cabinet corners were mitered so there is no evidence of a drawer or door from any angle.
Photo Credit:
Read McKendree
Cathedral ceilings and seamless cabinetry complement this kitchen’s river view
The low ceilings in this ’70s contemporary were a nagging issue for the 6-foot-8 homeowner. Plus, drab interiors failed to do justice to the home’s Connecticut River view.
By raising ceilings and removing non-load-bearing partitions, architect Christopher Arelt was able to create a cathedral-within-a-cathedral structure in the kitchen, dining and living area. Decorative mahogany rafters open the space’s height, introduce a warmer palette and create a welcoming framework for light.
The homeowner, a Frank Lloyd Wright fan, wanted to emulate the famed architect’s use of reddish-brown concrete floors, and the result further warmed the interior. “Concrete has a connotation of cold and industrial but can be just the opposite,” explains Arelt.
Clunky European hardware was replaced by hidden pivot hinges, and outside cabinet corners were mitered so there is no evidence of a drawer or door from any angle.
Cloakroom with Medium Wood Cabinets and Grey Walls Ideas and Designs
1