Reader Shannan and her husband are in the midst of stripping paint from their original wood cabinets. Shannan’s dilemma: She has asked for our advice on flooring, countertops and paint to complement the lovely woodtones, copper accents and aqua appliances. Bring on your ideas, readers — and Pam and I will be back at noon with our thoughts and some mood boards.
My husband and I peruse your site regularly for restoration ideas. We bought our 1959 ranch in 2013. We knew right away that this was the one. It was the most intact 50’s ranch we found. Most of them have been torn apart. We have painted every wall in the house and replaced the flooring. It was all carpeted, and we wanted something different. We are sticking to period appropriate flooring. We choose cork flooring for the bedrooms. We are in the process of replacing the carpet with red oak hardwood floors in the living room.
We even have a PINK bathroom upstairs. Still need a little work accessorizing, but that just takes time. We still have A LOT to do, but it will all come in time and money!
Here are some photos of what our kitchen looks like now. As you can see, it needs some help. We started two summers ago stripping the paint off our kitchen cabinets! We didn’t realize how much work it was and how little time we actually have…. So that project came to a halt. This winter we will be restoring our kitchen with period appropriate flooring and refinishing our birch cabinets, having a contractor come in early in the year to do the whole kitchen for us. Our plans in our kitchen ‘retro restoration’ include stripping cabinets and adding drawer glides and cabinet pull outs.
Also, we are trying to think of a way to better utilize the corner. A new boomerang countertop from Heffrons in Glacier is going to be installed. We are going with a neutral countertop color, because this summer I was lucky enough to find the turquoise cooktop to match the oven!
I have been struggling with a floor pattern. We know we want a VCT floor but are not sure of the color scheme. It needs to complement the original hotpoint turquoise oven and copper backsplash. This where we need some help. We definitely want to go with a VCT that won’t clash with the copper backsplash. We will replace the fridge at a later time. Any recommendations would be helpful too.
I asked Shannon — which Glacier laminate was she contemplating? The grey and white or the turquoise? Her response:
I guess we are still trying to decide between the two for the laminate countertop. I assume we will be putting metal banding too around the edges. Also need some help with a paint color for the contrasting picture window. Or any other paint options you may have in mind. I was looking some old posts of kitchen remodels last night and found one I really like:
I also attached some pictures of some of our vintage copper light fixtures.
Then, Pam and I noticed the GOLD SPARKLE LAMINATE countertop that Shannan currently has — the envy of many a Retro Renovator — and wondered why she was replacing it. Was it in bad shape? Shannan replied:
Yes, it is in terrible shape. Do you know of a way to clean it? There are some pretty gross stains on it. It’s not so sparkly anymore. 🙁
Okay, readers — Shannan needs your suggestions for what flooring, countertops, refrigerator and paint to use in her retro kitchen restoration. What do you think?
Pam and Kate respond:
First — Can you love the laminate you have?
Before we get into the possible solutions, Pam and I both wanted to drive home the point that fundamentally, we love the gold sparkle laminate countertop that Shannan already has. She says it is stained and not in good shape, but … it’s so desirable, can she live with any imperfections? When Pam and I were discussing the solutions for Shannan, we both agreed that if it were available today, gold sparkle laminate would be the perfect solution for Shannan’s countertops — that was before we realized they already were gold sparkle. See our story on Formica’s recommendations for six products to clean laminate. Of it that fails, perhaps cover the stained area with a drop in cutting board or trivet with hudee ring from Vance Industries?
- Gold sparkle laminate countertop — all mine after years of searching
- 70 vintage Wilsonart samples, including “Gold Satellite” shown above
- How laminate is made
All that said, we did consider replacement options…. on to our suggestions…
Some fundamental thoughts: Mixing warm and cold can be tricky
Pam here now. I had a tough time with this one — as I did in my own, turquoise-cabinet kitchen. The reason: Your aqua stove is a “cool” color. Your cabinets, cabinet hardware, backsplash, lighting and current countertop: “warm.” I think that getting warn and cool colors to harmonize — especially when you are dealing with very large swaths — such as the mass of cabinets and how they combine with the mass of floor — is tricky.
I drove Kate a little nuts making mood boards to try and begin to assess how to balance warm vs. cool colors. For sure, I would get all the samples, put them in my space and torture myself and DH for a good long time, before I made a final decision.
Here you go:
Option 1a: Cool Glacier countertop, Cool Raw Silk floor
Above:
- White GE Artistry refrigerator
- Vitros Glacier boomerang laminate from Heffron’s
- Azrock TexTile VCT floor in Raw Silk
- Paint — aqua color to match the vintage appliances
This option is Kate’s favorite. It would make for a light feeling kitchen with the light flooring, white and grey countertops and white refrigerator. Making the wall turquoise would add color to the space along with the vintage aqua appliances that Shannan already has. The cabinets and copper backsplash and light fixtures help warm up the space. Shannan could also add a few more pops of orange or pale yellow to bring more visual warmth to the room.
Option 1b: Cool Glacier countertop, Warm Autumn Haze floor
Above:
- White GE Artistry refrigerator
- Vitros Glacier boomerang laminate from Heffron’s
- Azrock Cortina VCT floor in Autumn Haze*— like in Pam’s kitchen
- Paint — aqua color to match the vintage appliances
See how the warm floor and the cool countertop are competing, compared to 1a? Pammy no likey.
*Ugh. After doing all the work on these mood boards, we discovered that Azrock Cortina Autumn Haze has been discontinued. However, there are other colors in the new(ish) Azrock TexTile line that are good substitutes, so we’ll continue as planned…
But, I like the warm floor with the warm cabinets.
Option 2: Cool turquoise Glacier countertop, Warm Autumn Haze floor
Above:
- White GE Artistry refrigerator
- Vitros Turquoise Glacier boomerang laminate from Heffron’s
- Azrock Cortina VCT floor in Autumn Haze — Haze — like in Pam’s kitchen
- Paint — aqua color to match the vintage appliances
Even though the countertop is still technically cool, Pammy likey better, because there’s more color in the countertop — the aqua — and for some reason, that helps.
YES: In this kitchen, Pam loves the idea of stainless steel edging. It will look great.
Option 3a: Cool Charcoal countertop, Cool Raw Silk floor
Above:
- White GE Artistry refrigerator
- Formica charcoal boomerang laminate
- Azrock TexTile VCT floor in Raw Silk
- Paint — aqua color to match the vintage appliances
Pam is liking the charcoal Formica. The darkness is picking up on the blackhandles etc. of the stove.
Option 3b: Cool charcoal countertop, Warm Autumn Haze floor
Above:
- White GE Artistry refrigerator
- Formica charcoal boomerang laminate
- Azrock Cortina VCT floor in Autumn Haze — Haze — like in Pam’s kitchen
- Paint — aqua color to match the vintage appliances
To ensure an all-brown/beige interior does not look too drab, (1) be sure the space is well lit and (2) add pops of a well saturaged cool color as an accent.
Option 4: Warm butterscotch countertop, warm Autumn Haze floor
Above:
- White GE Artistry refrigerator
- Wilsonart retro butterscotch boomerang laminate — like Amber used in her kitchen.
- Azrock Cortina VCT floor in Autumn Haze — Haze — like in Pam’s kitchen
- Paint — aqua color to match the vintage appliances
Those butterscotch boomies look great with wood cabinet, but we’re not so sure when your appliances are aqua.
Option 5: Cool solid aqua countertop, cool Raw Silk floor
Above:
- White GE Artistry refrigerator
- Abet Laminati laminate in Azzuro Mary (or coordinating aqua color — we’d likely try to get as close in color to the ovens as possible — get samples to be sure) — like Betty Crafter’s kitchen
- Azrock TexTile VCT floor in Raw Silk
- Paint — light yellow to bring more warmth to the space
A solid countertop aqua could look good.
Option 6: Cool solid aqua countertop, warm Autumn Haze floorAbove:
- White GE Artistry refrigerator
- Abet Laminati laminate in Azzuro Mary (or coordinating aqua color, get samples to be sure) — like Betty Crafter’s kitchen
- Azrock Cortina VCT floor in Autumn Haze — Haze — like in Pam’s kitchen
- Paint — light yellow to bring more warmth to the space …
- Or.Pam says, this one would look good with the Bradbury Atomic Doodle wallpaper, too. She says that this is also a favorite combo — because like the charcoal countertop, the aqua countertop reads like a new graphical element — and is a stock/deco paper (vs. special order/digital print) laminate.
Paired with the warm floor.
So there you go, Shannan. We bet that helped. Or confused you more. Which?
Jeannette Grove says
Bar keepers friend, in the can, keeps our glitter laminate counter tops looking great!
pam kueber says
Ack! Be careful! I would never use anything acidic on my surfaces!
Darrel says
I would go with #6 but a stainless fridge.
Lizzy says
Mixing up too much warm and cool gets too complicated – the cabinets are plenty of warm. I have those same cabinets. Toasty! As for natural wood and aqua? That’s rooted in the classic Renaissance painting palette based around cerulean blue and burnt Sienna. Always a winner. I would keep or replace the white with glitter counters, but thats me. Aqua floor, or grey with serious aqua Other in the room. Unless you go with black and white checkerboard, which I wouldn’t call ‘diner’ at all – people use it in bathrooms, kitchens, hallways, it’s eternal. The Romans used it.
Grew up with a 1958 kitchen with teak cabinetry painted aqua inside, black and white floors, and that marble laminate on the counters. The butler pantry is teak cabinets and shiny black Formica. On the walls, too. It was all gorgeous in my earliest memories and looks great today with stainless appliances as the only change, aside from replacement floors in the eighties.. Some things are timeless. Even with those hammered copper hinges and handles.
pam kueber says
Glitter laminate no longer available, from anywhere…
Maxwell says
Do you know the make or model of the larger brass light fixture in the kitchen layouts above. I really like it and want to buy one.
pam kueber says
That is vintage — they are widely available via ebay. Note: The pull-down feature is no longer to code, we have been told — consult with your properly licensed professional to understand the issue so that you can make informed decisions.
Shannan says
We ordered samples from Congoleum. The CX Series looks promising from Congoleum. They are streaky.
http://www.congoleum.com/productdetails/CX47