Help! is our kitchen mantle too big for the room?!
7 months ago
Featured Answer
Sort by:Oldest
Comments (12)
- 7 months ago
- 7 months ago
Related Discussions
Our new kitchen has too many doorways so stuck on how design
Comments (5)Rather than knocking walls completely, can you knock parts of wall A and B to achieve an open plan feel, but leaving some walls for units? It's hard to advise you though without seeing the full floor plan. Also, are you totally committed to a tall oven unit? Would you go for a built under oven?...See MoreIs our kitchen island big enough for a hob?
Comments (2)Hi - in UK that's an acceptable size and as a designer I would say that's totally fine - although most islands tend to be 900mm deep. In USA you'd need a bit more depth behind your hob - it's a min of 12inches clear landing space one side and 15inches clear the other side of hob then 9inches behind....See MoreHelp me add wall art to our dining room
Comments (5)Hi I am an artist in England and specialise in bespoke art - but I am guessing you are in the US - here is my advice you can look online at saatchiart.com search for price range size style (abstract etc) and even colours there are affordable pieces to be had, you can also select those from the country you are in to minimise shipping costs. Or you could go to a company that prints photos onto large canvases and pick out one or two of your own photos (landscape, seacape, trees etc you will have an affordable solution and something that reminds you of a favourite place or time. You can afford to go bright and bold in this space. From an aesthetic point of view - can you raise the light? even 10 inches would help :)...See MoreHelp! our new kitchen is too cold.
Comments (49)We had a similar problem. Had two rads and two plinth heaters, but they weren't working properly and we were freezing. Had the plumber in and he adjusted them and now we're toasty in a matter of minutes. Get one plinth heater put in and plug in a small electric coal or log effect stove ( cheap enough) to bridge the gap. If your windows are thermally bridged have you thought about contacting the window installer to complain , about the problems you are having? The builder, too , as he should have ensured your extension was properly insulated. The suggestion about thermal lined curtains that pull right back during the day is spot on as it will help insulate the room and the kitchen will be warmer in the mornings to come down to. Finally the door is essential as both the hall and front door area are most likely sucking away any warmth from the kitchen area, especially if there is a stairwell. I now think if I was doing mine again I would dig up the floor and put in underfoot heating but this is way too disruptive to consider now. Best of luck....See More- 7 months ago
- 7 months ago
- 7 months agolast modified: 7 months ago
- 7 months ago
- 7 months ago
- 5 months ago
- 5 months ago
Rhya O’SullivanOriginal Author