I promise, pictures of the whole kitchen are coming sooooon. But I painted it, and then decided I didn't like the color and just painted again. The details are killing me ya'll! That, and I don't constantly work on our house, of course! So, today... I give you...THE ISLAND.
Oooohhh, the island! This has been my favorite project so far. Maybe because it's been much easier than I thought it would be! It also seems like a big deal because it's a giant piece of the kitchen in the middle of the room! My island went from a very small 4ft x 2ft island that just didn't make any sense for the size and space in the kitchen... to a whopping 7.4ft x 3.4ft island with an overhang for stools.To make things simple, I bought a prefab base cabinet. It felt like cheating, but in the interest of time, it was actually the best idea I've had. I just screwed them together in the front, but the back had a small gap because the front of the cabinets stuck out on the sides. The gap was just big enough for a piece of base molding I had left over from my cabinet project. Maybe not the most professional shim, but it worked! Then, I went to Home Depot and had them cut a piece of plywood to fit across the back of both cabinets. Perfect fit! The minute it went on, it looked like one cohesive island. At that point, I started to realize my plan was actually going to work. But I didn't want just a cohesive island... I wanted a pretty one! I put my 1x4s and my trim pieces on the ends to match my cabinets. I want the end result to at least look like "custom cabinets" even if they aren't.
The new cabinet was slightly off at the bottom and I had to add a 1x4 so that I could put the base molding on. But...lesson learned... don't pull pieces of flimsy pre-fab board off the baseboard and toss it if you aren't absolutely SURE you won't need it. You might end up being like me and have to cut plywood to go across the front before you put on the molding. It's not pretty, and I'm glad no one will be looking under my cabinets.
Side note: I wish I had used MDF on my cabinets instead of the 1x4s. It would have required less sanding on my part.
Trim
The bane of my existence. Okay, not really. It's not difficult, but it's definitely time consuming. I'm not math-oriented. I have a journalism degree. Math... it's just not my thing... except when you're a DIYer. Then, it kind of has to be your thing. For instance, when you're standing in Home Depot and think, "I know exactly how long that island is! I'll just cut it in the store." Except, I didn't consider the fact that this is trim. Trim requires corners--not flat ends. So, back to my pre-existing problem of not buying enough trim.But the back of the island needs some trim to cover the plywood too! But I had lofty ambitions of these rectangles across the back. Multiple rectangles means a lot of math. This was my original plan... and then what happened when I realized my drawing was pretty, but my math was all wrong. And even after all this, my math was still wrong, and I redid it another ten times. The good news is, it did eventually work and my fudged math looks pretty good.
Electrical
***Like all things electrical, flip the breaker off before you start working on it. Call an electrician if something isn't working right or you just don't think you can do it. It's not worth the risks of burning your house down or electrocution.***The ends of my original island each had an electrical outlet. When I added the second cabinet, I covered one of my outlets...literally. Just forgot about it. Luckily I was able to pop the blue box back into the cabinet. But my wiring from the floor was now under my new cabinet. I wanted to minimize visible holes, so I made one through the base back toward the old cabinet. Then, I ran the wire back through the original hole.
I ended up talking to my dad about the best way to run the wire, and then talked to the guy at Home Depot about what I needed. He sent me home with everything. And then, I put in an outlet after that and discovered all I needed to know about wire gauges, and what was being used in my kitchen. I planned it out three more times and took everything back. I finally landed on this pre-wraped wire that made everything easier to work with and kept it all neatly together. I then ran all the incoming wire to one box and split it out from there to my two outlets by drilling a hole through my middle walls. Then, the indimidatint part of cutting the outlet box in the side of my sparkling white Island. Seriously, that part was hard after all my hard work on this thing! I didn't want to fix any mistakes. But I did it! Worked out fine. Anchored all my wire to the walls and VOILA! I have this little outlet tester I use that I plugged in to check the outlet. Flipped on the breaker and...NOTHING. Nada. No power. I started thinking about how my island was already anchored down, and how I was going to need an electrician. Then, I realized my wine refridgerator wasn't on either and realized the GFCI had flipped. That's that little button on outlets in your kitchen and bathroom that flip when you do something stupid like overload the outlet or throw you hair dryer into running water. It also flipped when you flip the breaker. Pressed button. WE HAVE POWER!
I am impressed. Looks awesome!I don't see any corbel under the overhang and with granite anything more a 6in over hang needs support or it can crack.
ReplyDeleteThis seems to be a controversial topic even among granite experts. I did consult with the granite installer, who also happened to be the own of the company with 25+ years experience. I agonized over the design a good bit because of this topic. He assured me the overhang did not need extra supports. Now, once I add chairs, I may find my children climbing on it...and then I might add them anyway.
ReplyDeleteWhen we replaced our counter tops we extended the overhang from the exist 8" (too small) to 11", our granite company said that it needed the support due to natural veining of the stone can create increased risk of fracture when weight is applied.
ReplyDelete