Categories
House Tours Kitchens

A Sydney blogger’s light-filled and lovely IKEA kitchen

Photography by Lucas Boyd

We recently checked out blogger Rebecca Lowrey Boyd’s kitchen and loved it so much, we persuaded her to share all the details with us. You can check out more of Rebecca’s writing at Wee Birdy.

I never thought I would renovate our kitchen. When we bought our ‘70s modernist pole house on Sydney’s upper North Shore three years ago, I was a staunch defender of its wood-panelled walls and ceiling. While everyone peered around in the gloom, I felt like I was living in a little wooden cabin in the the bush.

Why renovate?

After three months of living with our kitchen, the charm of the timber-lined space wore thin. The darkness of the kitchen was at odds with the rest of the house, which we’d since painted white and was bathed in light. More than anything, the clunkiness of the cabinetry was annoying. The drawers were heavy and frequently got stuck, and everything felt disorganised and messy. The overhead cabinets dividing the kitchen and living room made the room feel dark and closed in.

Why IKEA?

We knew a stone benchtop was out of the question because we have two poles going through the benchtop. The only option was timber so we could cut around the poles like a jigsaw. For a flatpack option, IKEA appealed because of the budget-friendly cabinetry and oak benchtops. We’ve got a Scandi-style home and it’s easy to get the Scandi look with IKEA. Finally I was drawn to the soft-closing, deep drawers that are so much more expensive in a custom-made kitchen.

Big changes

We removed the overhead cupboards that hung over the benchtop, which opened up the space and allowed the light from the living room to flood the kitchen. We also painted the dark timber panelling white in Dulux Natural White.

Benchtops

IKEA’s AKERBY worktop in oak (no longer available but there are similar).

Cabinetry

White IKEA FAKTUM cabinets (now called METOD).

Splashback

Hand-made ceramic subway tiles with black grout. We loved the organic look and the wavy surface imperfections. It gave our flatpack kitchen a more handcrafted, customised look.

Sink and tapware

The DOMSJÖ double bowl sink completed the relaxed Scandi-style look, which tied in with the rest of our house. We’d like a black kitchen tap but for now we’ve got an ELVERDAM tap (we love the pull-out spout for rinsing dishes).

Appliances

IKEA SVAVANDE ceiling-mounted extractor hood.

Lighting

We spray-painted IKEA’S white RANARP pendant lights black, and hung them over the working area of the benchtop. We also ran LED strip lighting under the bottom cupboards. It gives the space a soft glow at night, which is great when we have the TV on in the next room.

Mini vertical pole gardens

Our home is filled with plants and the kitchen wasn’t going to be the exception, so we painted the poles white and turned them into mini vertical gardens with Little Urban Farmers’ hanging gardens planters.

Worst thing we did

We orginally went with IKEA’s recommended tradesperson. We ended up having to rip out the benchtop and start again.

Best thing we did

Hire our builder, Matthew Blackmore. He carefully cut around our poles and joined the new IKEA oak benchtops seamlessly with a biscuit-joint, held together with benchtop clamps and wood glue. (The first tradie butt-jointed the benchtop together with Sikaflex and the finish was messy.

Our tradie dream team

Builder: Matthew Blackmore 0499 997 375

Painter: Joey Neukam 0435 162 240

Matt Blackmore’s top 3 IKEA timber benchtop tips

  1. If you’re joining together IKEA timber benchtops, ask your carpenter to make a biscuit joint and hold it together with benchtop clamps and wood glue.
  2. Use kitchen grade benchtop oil and give your benchtop three generous coats of oil with a second sand.
  3. It’s worth choosing the IKEA solid timber benchtops instead of the timber veneers, as the woodchip can disintegrate around the cut-outs to the sink and it can get black mould. If you do get a timber veneer, use the end strip to protect around the pieces which are exposed to the sink.

More kitchens and bathrooms

Categories
Design

Check out brand new lifestyle blog, We Are Scout

A new blog launched today and I think it’s going to be pretty great. We Are Scout is a collaboration between two popular Australian design and lifestyle bloggers, Lisa Tilse (The Red Thread) and Rebecca Lowrey Boyd (Wee Birdy).

Lisa-and-Rebecca_we-are-scout
Lisa and Rebecca

With an impressive 13 years of combined blogging experience, along with many years’ experience in the magazine, publishing and design industries, Lisa and Rebecca bring a fresh and thoroughly professional edge to the lifestyle blog category. And if there’s something I’ll personally always champion it’s professional bloggers. The more of us out there, showing we’re a force to be taken seriously, the better!

Based in Sydney, both Lisa and Rebecca offer an expert global view on design, craft, interiors, travel, shopping, fashion and beauty, with a distinctly Australian voice and focus. By combining forces, the pair believe that We Are Scout will quickly establish itself as a trusted, respected and influential lifestyle blog that will lead trends and shape tastes.

Content will include:
– free DIY craft tutorials;
– free printables;
– shopping & destination guides and maps;
– a weekly newsletter with extra content.

Photo credit: Lisa Tilse
Photo credit: Lisa Tilse
Photo credit: Lucas Boyd
Photo credit: Lucas Boyd

Designer, crafter and maker Lisa established The Red Thread, in 2008. Her passion for living a creative life and inspiring others to embrace creativity has attracted a loyal global following.

Experienced journalist Rebecca Lowrey Boyd founded Wee Birdy during the summer of 2007 in London, and captured the attention of a global audience obsessed with shopping, fashion, design, interiors, style, travel and beauty.

What are you waiting for? Go check it out and tell the girls I sent you!

Categories
Interiors Addict

Interiors Addict on the Decorex top 100 list

I was delighted to wake up to the news from the UK that I made it onto the #DECOREX100 list of top interior design Twitter influencers!

In the three weeks of the campaign, international interior design show Decorex received 3,300 tweets from the global interior design community, nominating almost 300 interior design Twitter influencers. The campaign reached more than 100,000 interior design professionals and enthusiasts. The #DECOREX100 list of the final top 100 influencers was curated by the Decorex International team, and features the most influential Twitter users including interior designers, design brands, stores and websites as well as industry organisations, bloggers and magazines.

Fellow Aussies (not that I am one, techincally, but whatever) who made it onto the list include Lucy Feagins of The Design Files, Rebecca Lowrey Boyd of Wee Birdy, Jo and Kim of Desire to Inspire (go the bloggers!) and Amanda Talbot. Some of my favourite international interiors blogs made it on too, including decor8, Bright.Bazaar, Happy Interior Blog and Apartment Therapy.

Decorex is being held at the Royal Hospital Chelsea, London, between 23-26 September 2012.

Categories
Interiors Addict

New online finds you should know about

I’ve discovered a few new online treasures lately so I thought I should share them with you.

Duckfat: a cool little site selling vintage, retro, industrial and brand new things for your home. Love the lighting, apothecary jars, flour sack cushions, vintage maps and other quirky one-offs.

White Horse Home: Discovered this a while ago and have hankering after its Today Is A Good Day wall hanging ever since. It will be mine. Small but fab collection of cushions, wall hangings and candles.

Wee Birdy: I’ve recently got to know fellow blogger Rebecca and her blog is really cool. Check it out if you’re a girl who likes shopping, vintage fashion, interiors, Etsy and the like.

Haus Maus: Of course you’ve heard of decor8 but have you checked out Holly Becker’s more personal blog about her expat adventures in Germany?

Sydney Writers’ Centre: I was recently a finalist in Sydney Writers’ Centre’s Best Australian Blogs Competition (hooray!). Did you know they run a two-week evening course on writing about interiors, style and design? I’m thinking about doing it.

Sarah Wilson’s blog: This is completely unrelated to interiors but a week ago I embarked on Sarah Wilson’s eight-week I Quit Sugar program. That’s what that #IQS hashtag is all about on Twitter. I’m not endorsing it or anything but if you’re interested, check it out.

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