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Home / The Museum of Mid Century Material Culture / time capsule homes

Gorgeous gray and turquoise 1956 dream kitchen and four bathrooms — 10 photos

pam kueber - Updated: November 5, 2020

Retro Renovation stopped publishing in 2021; these stories remain for historical information, as potential continued resources, and for archival purposes.

gray kitchen cabinetsBuckle up, readers. Here is one of the most beautiful, glowy, dreamy vintage kitchens yet, and the story is still unfolding. This 1956 kitchen — with top-of-the-line St. Charles steel cabinets, in a soft gray with aquamarine countertops — first appeared on our metal kitchen cabinet buy/sell Forum (now defunct). Bonnie listed the cabinets for sale. She recently bought this house — a gorgeous c. 1900 Southern Victorian near Nashville — and she is going to create a 1900s-era kitchen for it. Within days of the listing, reader Pam snapped them up, with plans to put them into a house she recently purchased. Stunned by these beautiful photographs, I got permission to feature them from real estate agent Starling Davis and from Showcase Photographers. I also was connected to the original owner — Mrs. Starling Davis, mother of the real estate agent — who lived in this home for 50 years, from 1956 until a few years ago — and who, with her husband, had the kitchen designed and installed.

gray kitchen

Mrs. Davis told me that when her family bought the house, it was a shambles. They renovated the entire home, including putting these grey St. Charles cabinets, aqua countertops, and turquoise stove into the kitchen. She said that her husband is the one who knew about St. Charles. He asked to put these in. The wallpaper and flooring as shown, is original. Mrs. Davis says the gray has a “touch of pink” in it. The cabinets are in perfect shape, except for a small gash in one place.

gray and turquoise vintage kitchenThe side-by-side refrigerator, Mrs. Davis says, came later. She believes it was the first modern side-by-side available. Her husband bought it as a surprise — and he had it painted soft gray to match the cabinets before installing it.

vintage kitchenPlease, readers: No woe-is-me’s that Bonnie is not keeping the kitchen (I will expeditiously edit/delete such comments). I totally understand her desire to create a period-authentic 1900s kitchen. We are so happy she chose to list the cabinets on our Forum — and that an RR reader, Pam, snapped them up! Good retro karma! Thank you, Bonnie!

1956 breakfast roomAll the photos above are of the kitchen and the adjacent breakfast room. What else can I say? Gorgeous gorgeous gorgeous. Now, the four stunning bathrooms also installed in 1956:
yellow and bone bathroomThis ivory-yellow bathroom, with its ivory colored fixtures, was Mrs. Davis’ bathroom. I marveled with her about how “glowy” this room was — she credits the wallpaper. Exquisite taste. This takes my breath away. I’ll even take it over Mamie pink. Gasp! Yes!

1956 bathroomAn angle on the vanity. Louver doors are good and righteous things. Mrs. Davis says, “We took good care of everything.” Well, yes, you did!

vintage bathroomBeige tile, Mrs. Davis says. Notice how they did the shower entry — they tiled up three tiles before mounting the shower door. Louver doors again on the vanity. Hexes on the floors, as in the ladie’s bath and the blue bath coming up. Mrs. Davis says the fixtures are Crane. In her bathroom, though, they are American-Standard.

blue bathroomBlue bathroom. There Is Nothing Wrong About Tiling Your Bathroom Countertop. Wallpaper = yes. Peek into the hall to see the louver closet doors. I am going to do a follow-up story on this room alone, there are numerous design secrets within that Mrs. Davis told me about.

blue bathroom Even though the foreground of this photo reads blue, this is a very soft green tile, Mrs. Davis says. With a pink sink (remember Nora’s time capsule pink and blue bathroom?) Metallic wallpaper…. towel rings with bows on top… a little tile-in nook shelf above the vanity… a door with applied trim…. and teensy mosaic tiles — on the floor. This is the most amazing house ever.

Thanks again to Mrs. Starling Davis for talking to me about this house… to realtor Starling Davis, to Dan Raper of Showcase Photographers for permission to feature the photos, and to reader Bonnie and Pam, for helping with this story. Guess what? More to come.

Love Time Capsule houses?
See all my time capsule stories here.

CATEGORIES:
The Museum of Mid Century Material Culture time capsule homes

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  1. Jen says

    March 11, 2012 at 2:07 pm

    There is nothing wrong with wanting to create a kitchen that is original to the era of the house. After all, isn’t that what we are all enthralled with? The house needs a 1900s kitchen to bring it back to its original intended style. That being said, that kitchen is amazing! Love the color scheme and the wallpaper. It makes me want to bake and cook yummy meals. It’s one of those kitchens that makes me happy and dreamy at the same time. Kudos to Bonnie for making the choice to sell the cabinets rather than hauling them off to the dump. THAT is the beauty of retro renovating — finding people who recognize the beauty in all sorts of design and are willing to take the time to find a new owner who need items for their own retro renovation.

  2. Linda says

    March 11, 2012 at 1:33 pm

    The gold foil bathroom wallpaper is fabulous!

  3. Janine says

    March 9, 2012 at 9:48 am

    Wow! I wouldn’t change a thing.

  4. Jordanna says

    March 8, 2012 at 10:44 pm

    The ivory-yellow bathroom makes me happy beyond the telling of it. Just a great look. From the hex tile floor to the square tile walls to the damask wallpaper.

    Soft, and warm, without being strident. It can be hard to use yellow in a bathroom without going too strident, too jaundiced, or yucky. But yellow is my favourite colour of all and I love seeing it used well and even managing to be subtle.

    It’s my favourite room here. The kitchen is nice, especially the grey cabinets, and very inspiring for other possible themes (now pondering grey and yellow actually), but the bathroom? So much love.

  5. Eartha Kitsch says

    March 8, 2012 at 10:02 am

    Just saw that gorgeous stove come up on Craigslist this morning. Will post to the forum.

  6. Kristine says

    March 7, 2012 at 1:15 am

    Pam,
    Would it be ok to pin this gorgeous kitchen to my MCM time capsule Pinterest board? This is seriously the most stunning kitchen I’ve EVER seen. My absolute dream!

    • pam kueber says

      March 7, 2012 at 1:38 am

      I prefer not. Thank you for asking, Kristine – major points for that.

  7. Janice says

    March 6, 2012 at 2:06 pm

    Oh how I wish I was Mrs. Davis’ daughter. First, I would have got to grow up in that fabulous house and learned all about tasteful decorating at a young age and secondly, I might have been named something cooler than Janice. I love the name Starling almost as much as the house!

  8. Adrian says

    March 6, 2012 at 1:49 pm

    I do love the heat registers in the on the baseboards. Never seen anything like it.

    • Janice says

      March 6, 2012 at 2:07 pm

      We have the exact same registers in our house in every room. When I first looked at the house during the buying process, I couldn’t figure out what they were!

      • Adrian says

        March 6, 2012 at 2:19 pm

        If there is a pretty hole in the wall, it’s definetley a heat register.

  9. Adrian says

    March 6, 2012 at 1:28 pm

    Wow! That’s is one AWESOME HOUSE! The ceilings, OH MY! They’re so high!!

  10. Sherree says

    March 6, 2012 at 11:59 am

    I am still drooling over the kitchen cabinets:-) Agreed that they are not period with the house. So glad she is saving them for someone else to love! You can see that the owners loved and took care of their home. I also have a little tiled half wall in my main (hall) bath between the toilet and original location of washer/dryer. It does help with privacy 😉

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