Monday, July 13, 2009

Very Cherry

OK, so here's how it all started. A very generic, white melamine (I call it Mac-Tac, after the ubiquitous peel-and-stick plastic coatings of the 70s) kitchen, replete with a hideous I-Krap-A (is my cabinetmaker's bias showing?) module plopped in the middle of the floor. Ah yes, the floor. A floating floor on top of another layer of flooring, on top of another layer of flooring. Nothing 3 guys with 3 circular saws and 3 crowbars couldn't rectify. But I digress...


I wanted a cherry island. A peninsula, to be precise. With a granite top. Cherry to match the cabinets I designed for the rest of the kitchen, and granite, well, just because I can't think of a better way to tp off cherry than with dark granite.

The first step to build the carcasses for the base cabinets. The plan was to have two cabinets, each with two pot drawers and one standard cutlery drawer on top. I built the frames from cherry plywood, and pine and maple members.








The next step was the drawers, constructed from solid cherry with cherry ply inserts in a pseudo-Shaker style.


Needless to say, in a 50 year old house, the floors are anything but true, so lots of shimming was needed. I think the end result was worth the effort.


About Me

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A blog mostly about my photography, my etsy shop, travel, and other assorted addictions and predilections. I've been passionate about photography for just about as long as I can remember, right from that very first 1960s Kodak Brownie around my wrist at Upper Canada Village... A great deal of my adult life has been spent travelling the world for extended periods, always with cameras in tow. My photographic interests run the gamut from intimate portraits to landscapes to ephemera to street life. Although firmly entrenched in the digital age, I have a weakness for film and for old cameras.