Old House Journal

KITCHENS & BATHS

Mediterran­ean color meets Craftsman design in a joyfully restored house in Portland, Oregon.

- By Brian D. Coleman

Craftsman design and Mediterran­ean colors meet in a kitchen juicy with imaginatio­n.

This kitchen is in a 1906 Craftsman house in the northeast Portland neighborho­od of Irvington. The house had suffered neglect. Windows were hidden behind layers of vinyl “lace” that had mildewed; pulling the panels aside revealed broken panes covered with cereal-box cardboard. The kitchen had gotten a cheap update. But: Original tongue-and-groove paneling was visible behind peeling wallpaper in the breakfast room. In other rooms, original woodwork of Douglas fir had not been painted, though the varnish had darkened.

Once the basics were finished, the fun projects began. In the breakfast room, wainscot in a compositio­n material was removed to reveal beadboard walls and ceiling. In the kitchen, original cabinets and marble-aggregate countertop­s were intact on one wall and became templates for restoratio­n. A period-appropriat­e backsplash replaced black and white tiles added later. New countertop­s are Caesarston­e, an easy-to-maintain quartz aggregate. New maple strip flooring replicates the lost original, and is top-nailed in period fashion.

The sunny colors of Italian pottery cued paint colors in the house. These homeowners have long collected colorful majolica from Deruta in Umbria and Siena in Tuscany.

1. SAVING WHAT’S ORIGINAL

In the breakfast room, compositio­n wainscotin­g covered in seven layers of peeling paper was torn away to reveal the century-old tongue-and-groove boards on walls and ceiling. Original casement windows found in the basement replaced deteriorat­ed aluminum sliders.

2. PERIOD COLORS ANEW

Orange-tone walls and fern-green cabinets wear period colors cued by the Italian and French pottery. Maple strip flooring replicatin­g the original (damaged in a 1920s woodstove fire) is a subtle reflection of the bright walls.

3. SIMPLE TILE TIE-IN

Dashes of color, including a pickup of the orange tone, distinguis­h the subway tile, which was ubiquitous in turn-of-thecentury kitchens. Backsplash tile by Pratt & Larson replaced incongruou­s black and white tiles.

4. EVERY DETAIL

Cabinets work because they’re based on a wall of originals found intact in this kitchen. Wood trim matches the 1906 date of the house. Rounded shelves at the end of the run are both practical and recall 1920s–30s updates to the house. FOR RESOURCES, SEE PAGE 103.

 ??  ?? A fearless use of period colors is evident in the kitchen of the 1906 house.
A fearless use of period colors is evident in the kitchen of the 1906 house.
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