Search results for "Tongue and groove panelling" in Home Design Ideas
Camilla Bellord Interiors
A bedroom sanctuary! Black lacquered Chinese trunks with intricate bronze clasp detailing and bespoke architectural lighting, sit in beautiful juxtaposition to the warm stone hues of the walling, tongue groove panelling and sumptuous carpeting. Luxurious detailing is added with crisp white Egyptian bedlinen and decorative cushions, as well as ivory cable knit cashmere throws.
Shannon Ggem Design
Michael Kelley / mpkelley.com
Fir tongue and groove ceiling
Vintage pendant light
Heartland Legacy Range
Beveled mirror subway tile by Jockimo
Brazilian Soapstone countertop, unoiled
Rubber floor tile in leather finish
Custom crown and casings
Woodhaven Log & Lumber
You might just want to stop and look before descending this fabulous stairway to the basement. The custom cedar railing's pencil-sharpened pieces are worthy of a lingering touch.
The tongue and groove paneling on the walls gives a great contrast to the pine tread on the steps and makes for a special trip from the main level to the lower level of this unique log home.
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Lauren Leonard Interiors
Light filled foyer with 1"x6" pine tongue and groove planking, antique table and parsons chair.
Photo by Scott Smith Photographic
Medium sized coastal front door in Jacksonville with a glass front door, beige walls, ceramic flooring, a single front door and beige floors.
Medium sized coastal front door in Jacksonville with a glass front door, beige walls, ceramic flooring, a single front door and beige floors.
Woodhaven Log & Lumber
Would you really swim or just sit poolside and gape at the gorgeousness enveloping you in this poolroom? This is northern White Cedar at its best. It's all the same wood here, just two different stains. It's all 1" x 6" tongue and groove and end-matched. The trim on the doors and windows is our 1" x 4".
Woodhaven Log & Lumber
The smallest of spaces can have special touches with WoodHaven products. The corner of this room pops with a 3" x 12" mantle with a natural face. The ceiling sports 6" knotty pine, tongue and groove paneling. The walls are solid, with 2" x 6" knotty pine quarter log, tongue and groove paneling.
Woodhaven Log & Lumber
If you're building a loft, why not make it spectacular with WoodHaven wood? This one has 6" x 6" decorative roof rafters, 8" knotty pine tongue and groove paneling that's end-matched on the walls, and 2" x 6" knotty pine decking. Yum.
Klopf Architecture
Klopf Architecture and Jesse Ososki Art remodeled an existing Eichler atrium home into a brighter, more open, and more functional version of its original self.
The goals were to preserve the Eichler look and feel without the need to strictly adhere to it. The scope of work included re-configuring the master bedroom/bath, the kitchen, and the hall bath/laundry area, as well as updating interior finishes throughout to be more sophisticated.
The owners are detail-oriented and were very involved in the design process, down to the selection of lighting controls and stainless steel faceplates.Their design aesthetic leans toward the Scandinavian — light and bright, with simple straight lines and pure geometric shapes.
The finish flooring is large porcelain tile (24” x 24”) in a neutral grey tone, providing a uniform backdrop against which other materials can stand out. The same tile continues into the shower floor (with a different finish texture for slip-resistance) and up the shower/tub walls (in a smaller size). Heath Classic Field ceramic tile in Modern Blue was used sparingly, to add color at the hall bath vanity backsplash and at the shampoo niches in both bathrooms. Back-painted soda glass in pale blue to match the Heath tile was used at the kitchen backsplash. This same accent color was also used at the front entry atrium door. Kitchen cabinetry, countertops, appliances, and light fixtures are all white, making the kitchen feel more airy and light. Countertops are Caesarstone Blizzard.
The owners chose to keep some of the original Eichler elements: the concrete masonry fireplace; the stained tongue-and-groove redwood ceiling decking; and the luan wall paneling. The luan paneling was lightly sanded, cleaned, and re-stained. The owners also kept an added element that was installed by a previous owner: sliding shoji panels at all bedroom windows and sliding glass doors, for both privacy and sun control. Grooves were cut into the new tile flooring for the shoji panels to slide in, creating a more integrated look. Walnut was used to add warmth and contrast at the kitchen bar top and niche, the bathroom vanities, and the window sill/ledge under the kitchen window.
This Burlingame Eichler Remodel is a 2,121 sf, 4 bedroom/2 bath home located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Klopf Architecture Project Team: John Klopf, Klara Kevane and Yegvenia Torres Zavala
Contractor: Jesse Ososki Art
Structural Engineer: Emmanuel Pun
Photography ©2018 Mariko Reed
Location: Burlingame, CA
Year completed: 2017
Paul N. Brow, Architect, LLC
Living room with painted paneled wall with concealed storage & television. Fireplace with black firebrick & custom hand-carved limestone mantel. Custom distressed arched, heavy timber trusses and tongue & groove ceiling. Walls are plaster. View to the kitchen beyond through the breakfast bar at the kitchen pass-through.
Maraya Interior Design
This rustic old cabin has no electricity, except for the windpower. It is located in the Southern California hills by the ocean. A custom designed, handscraped door, whitewashed stained tongue and groove pine paneling, and pine antiques. Everything is new in this cabin, but looks time worn.
Multiple Ranch and Mountain Homes are shown in this project catalog: from Camarillo horse ranches to Lake Tahoe ski lodges. Featuring rock walls and fireplaces with decorative wrought iron doors, stained wood trusses and hand scraped beams. Rustic designs give a warm lodge feel to these large ski resort homes and cattle ranches. Pine plank or slate and stone flooring with custom old world wrought iron lighting, leather furniture and handmade, scraped wood dining tables give a warmth to the hard use of these homes, some of which are on working farms and orchards. Antique and new custom upholstery, covered in velvet with deep rich tones and hand knotted rugs in the bedrooms give a softness and warmth so comfortable and livable. In the kitchen, range hoods provide beautiful points of interest, from hammered copper, steel, and wood. Unique stone mosaic, custom painted tile and stone backsplash in the kitchen and baths.
designed by Maraya Interior Design. From their beautiful resort town of Ojai, they serve clients in Montecito, Hope Ranch, Malibu, Westlake and Calabasas, across the tri-county areas of Santa Barbara, Ventura and Los Angeles, south to Hidden Hills- north through Solvang and more.
Fieldcrest Builders Inc
The first floor master bedroom features paneled walls and a cathedral ceiling with paneling and chamfered beams.
Larry Malvin Photography
Photo of a traditional master bedroom in Chicago with white walls.
Photo of a traditional master bedroom in Chicago with white walls.
PKA.
Design ideas for a contemporary living room in Minneapolis with beige walls, a ribbon fireplace and no tv.
First Sense Interiors
Design ideas for a small country utility room in Other with a belfast sink, shaker cabinets, blue cabinets, quartz worktops, blue walls, porcelain flooring, a stacked washer and dryer and white worktops.
Woodhaven Log & Lumber
The ceiling in The Jerky Outlet kicks it up a notch. WoodHaven's 1" x 6" knotty pine walls are capped by the same tongue and groove paneling. It's a far cry from your run-of-the-mill convenience store. Check it out the next time you're on I-75 in northern Michigan. It's just off the freeway. Exit 202.
Splice Design
Sarah Dorio
Beach style cloakroom in Atlanta with a submerged sink, grey cabinets, white walls, dark hardwood flooring, shaker cabinets and white worktops.
Beach style cloakroom in Atlanta with a submerged sink, grey cabinets, white walls, dark hardwood flooring, shaker cabinets and white worktops.
Blakes London
www.82mm.com
This is an example of a scandinavian l-shaped kitchen in London with a submerged sink, glass-front cabinets, black cabinets, marble worktops, white splashback, stone slab splashback, white appliances and light hardwood flooring.
This is an example of a scandinavian l-shaped kitchen in London with a submerged sink, glass-front cabinets, black cabinets, marble worktops, white splashback, stone slab splashback, white appliances and light hardwood flooring.
Klopf Architecture
Klopf Architecture and Jesse Ososki Art remodeled an existing Eichler atrium home into a brighter, more open, and more functional version of its original self.
The goals were to preserve the Eichler look and feel without the need to strictly adhere to it. The scope of work included re-configuring the master bedroom/bath, the kitchen, and the hall bath/laundry area, as well as updating interior finishes throughout to be more sophisticated.
The owners are detail-oriented and were very involved in the design process, down to the selection of lighting controls and stainless steel faceplates.Their design aesthetic leans toward the Scandinavian — light and bright, with simple straight lines and pure geometric shapes.
The finish flooring is large porcelain tile (24” x 24”) in a neutral grey tone, providing a uniform backdrop against which other materials can stand out. The same tile continues into the shower floor (with a different finish texture for slip-resistance) and up the shower/tub walls (in a smaller size). Heath Classic Field ceramic tile in Modern Blue was used sparingly, to add color at the hall bath vanity backsplash and at the shampoo niches in both bathrooms. Back-painted soda glass in pale blue to match the Heath tile was used at the kitchen backsplash. This same accent color was also used at the front entry atrium door. Kitchen cabinetry, countertops, appliances, and light fixtures are all white, making the kitchen feel more airy and light. Countertops are Caesarstone Blizzard.
The owners chose to keep some of the original Eichler elements: the concrete masonry fireplace; the stained tongue-and-groove redwood ceiling decking; and the luan wall paneling. The luan paneling was lightly sanded, cleaned, and re-stained. The owners also kept an added element that was installed by a previous owner: sliding shoji panels at all bedroom windows and sliding glass doors, for both privacy and sun control. Grooves were cut into the new tile flooring for the shoji panels to slide in, creating a more integrated look. Walnut was used to add warmth and contrast at the kitchen bar top and niche, the bathroom vanities, and the window sill/ledge under the kitchen window.
This Burlingame Eichler Remodel is a 2,121 sf, 4 bedroom/2 bath home located in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Klopf Architecture Project Team: John Klopf, Klara Kevane and Yegvenia Torres Zavala
Contractor: Jesse Ososki Art
Structural Engineer: Emmanuel Pun
Photography ©2018 Mariko Reed
Location: Burlingame, CA
Year completed: 2017
Woodhaven Log & Lumber
The natural beauty of our knotty pine paneling looks even better when it's custom cut for and installed as a tongue and groove wall butting into full logs. This WoodHaven knotty pine wall is a gorgeous accent in this full log house.
Finch London
Shaker Kitchen in Purbeck Stone with Hague Blue on the island. Tongue & Groove Panels, smoked bronze handles, stepped cornice, Fired Earth tiles
Aidan Brown
Search results for Tongue And Groove Panelling in Home Photos
Crystal Kitchen + Bath
February and March 2011 Mpls/St. Paul Magazine featured Byron and Janet Richard's kitchen in their Cross Lake retreat designed by JoLynn Johnson.
Honorable Mention in Crystal Cabinet Works Design Contest 2011
A vacation home built in 1992 on Cross Lake that was made for entertaining.
The problems
• Chipped floor tiles
• Dated appliances
• Inadequate counter space and storage
• Poor lighting
• Lacking of a wet bar, buffet and desk
• Stark design and layout that didn't fit the size of the room
Our goal was to create the log cabin feeling the homeowner wanted, not expanding the size of the kitchen, but utilizing the space better. In the redesign, we removed the half wall separating the kitchen and living room and added a third column to make it visually more appealing. We lowered the 16' vaulted ceiling by adding 3 beams allowing us to add recessed lighting. Repositioning some of the appliances and enlarge counter space made room for many cooks in the kitchen, and a place for guests to sit and have conversation with the homeowners while they prepare meals.
Key design features and focal points of the kitchen
• Keeping the tongue-and-groove pine paneling on the walls, having it
sandblasted and stained to match the cabinetry, brings out the
woods character.
• Balancing the room size we staggered the height of cabinetry reaching to
9' high with an additional 6” crown molding.
• A larger island gained storage and also allows for 5 bar stools.
• A former closet became the desk. A buffet in the diningroom was added
and a 13' wet bar became a room divider between the kitchen and
living room.
• We added several arched shapes: large arched-top window above the sink,
arch valance over the wet bar and the shape of the island.
• Wide pine wood floor with square nails
• Texture in the 1x1” mosaic tile backsplash
Balance of color is seen in the warm rustic cherry cabinets combined with accents of green stained cabinets, granite counter tops combined with cherry wood counter tops, pine wood floors, stone backs on the island and wet bar, 3-bronze metal doors and rust hardware.
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