Hutch makeover: 5 steps to add pizzazz to display cabinets – Orlando Sentinel

2022-08-21 23:21:21 By : Ms. Phoebe Pang

Now you see it Before: This pine hutch was long on function, but short on form. She did her job, but not with flair. After: By adding lighting and color, and curating the contents, the author turned this basic backdrop into the highlight of this kitchen eating area. Photos courtesy of Marni Jameson. (Courtesy photo)

Here’s the problem with being a home design columnist who talks to a lot of creative people who have good taste and good ideas: Once you know what’s possible, you can’t unknow. It can drive you nuts.

Such was the case with my kitchen hutch, a plain, pine, country French workhorse with open shelves above and ample cabinet space below. We’d been living together without complaint for 15 years, since I bought her for a steal from a shop going out of business.

That is until a few months ago when, while interviewing Dallas interior designer John Phifer Marrs for this column about his new book, “Interiors for Collectors” (Gibbs Smith, September 2021), he generally mentioned that open shelving units or cabinets you can see into look far nicer and showcase their contents much better when they are well lit and have colorfully painted interiors. The book’s many photos amplified the message.

That did it. To my newly educated eyes, my humble hutch was no longer okay as she was. And that I could not unknow. However, when I considered how to light and paint the shelves, I froze. If I put a light on the top ceiling of the upper section, it would not shine through the wood shelves below. Lower sections would still be dark. Lights in every bay seemed excessive, and switching out wood shelves for glass ones would not fit the hutch’s rustic style. Then what about the cords? And what color would I paint the background?

And so, as with so many good creative ideas that die on the road between Vision Street and Execution Avenue, my inspiration almost ended there.

Until last week. An electrician was at the house working outside. I showed him the hutch, and asked what it would take to light the shelves top to bottom.

“Oh, easy,” he said. (Watch the word ‘just.’) “You just run LED strip lights vertically down the inside of the front door frames. Then you just drill small holes in the shelves to pass the light strip through. Then you just put a transformer on the top of the cabinet and run a cord down the back.”

“You lost me at transformer,” I said.

“You could do this or just get a handyman.”

”I really don’t do furniture.”

I looked at him, in a way he correctly understood to mean that wasn’t the answer I wanted.

“But I could,” he said, smart man.

At this moment my consolidated years of frustrated home improvements, of hassles with hardware stores, husbands, and handymen, all came to bear, and I said, “Look, if I work with you, you go to the lighting store once and buy all the right stuff the first time. And there’s no cursing and no throwing the hammer.”

He understood. Then, as long as I was asking him to hang the moon, I asked if we could add a dimmer.

“Yes,” he said, “and a timer.”

I resisted the urge to turn a cartwheel and sprang up and down instead.

We agreed on a price, and he got to work.

Two hours later, the shelves were delightfully aglow.

The final, lighted hutch. Photos courtesy of Marni Jameson. (Courtesy photo)

Next came the challenge of choosing a paint color. I narrowed the choice to three, shades of blue, green and orange, all colors found in the nearby drapes and throughout the house. I asked anyone who would listen for their opinion. I got a three-way tie.

So I texted Marrs, who was happy to hear he’d inspired me. I sent him photos. Within seconds he replied: “I vote orange. It is in the fabric, and would look great with the dishes. It will be pretty with the yellow walls and the crisp white trim. What a happy room!”

“And about to get even happier!” I texted back. Then I gathered my paint supplies and painted the hutch’s back wall Sherwin Williams Quite Coral. I replaced the dishes and glassware, pulling out stray pieces that weren’t part of a cohesive set, and staging the shelves with more intention. I sent Marrs photos.

“Looks fabulous! That cabinet was starved for color!’

Lights. Color. Control. Boom! Once you see it, you can’t go back.

If you have visible shelves in your home, or a hutch in need of pizzazz, here are five steps to take a basic backdrop from ordinary to extraordinary.

Marni Jameson is the author of six home and lifestyle books, including What to Do With Everything You Own to Leave the Legacy You Want, Downsizing the Family Home — What to Save, What to Let Go, and Downsizing the Blended Home — When Two Households Become One. You may reach her at marnijameson.com.