Former Vogue editor, Virginia Tupker, aided her friend redesign an 1870's farm in Bedford, New York for modern day living. The kitchen island is constructed from a classic marble slab on a steel base, the cooker is by BlueStar, and the shelves are made of wood the ring lights are from Rewire, and the floor is concrete.
Inside of this comfy Long Island abode, the zinc-topped kitchen dining table is from ABC Carpet & Home, the stools are by Arthur Umanoff, the stove hood is by Thermador, and the walls are painted in Benjamin Moore's Just White.
This Georgia cabin makes wide use of sterile materials, and also brings an acquired-over-time texture to this kitchen features. Having a soapstone apron-front sink, teak countertops, and heart pine floors salvaged from 300-year-old beams in a South Carolina mill, this farmhouse kitchen has character and age.
The proprietors of this Tennessee cabin used reclaimed materials because of their kitchen's diverse but comfy feel. Their stools are coated with old shirts that were repurposed from Goodwill, while their salvaged sink is revamped with a skirt and legs made from older balusters. The sconces with piping come from Habitat for Humanity ReStore added to mimic the shelving beneath.
Engineered timber looks even more beautiful against crisp white walls and dishes. The owner of the northern California home used Douglas fir for redwood and the shelving for the farm dining table. Exposed hanging and shelving pots are features of a country kitchen.
One of the simplest ways to incorporate farmhouse style into your kitchen and throughout your house is to hang classic signs that say things like "Grocery" or even "Meat Market." You can find them on Etsy or in the local shop forestry.
It had been love at first sight when artist Eva Claessens and art seller Kris Ghesquière came upon a distant roadside ruin in Uruguay which they then converted into their dream home. Inside, the kitchen pendant light is leather, the ceiling beam is a classic railroad track found in a nearby field, and the flooring is tinted cement tile.
For an Alpine getaway in St. Moritz, the kitchen ceiling and walls have been coated in 18th-century Portuguese tiles, the 19th century French dining table is surrounded by English chairs of the exact same era, and the light fixture is 19th-century French.
The all-white kitchen in this rustic Tennessee home stays cozy with shiplap paneling that "keeps things from feeling sterile," the owner says. Accents like cutting boards and the barstools add some heat.