• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • Kitchens
  • Bathrooms
  • Blog
  • Exterior
  • Other Rooms
  • Decorate
  • The “Museum”
  • Be Safe/Renovate Safe
Retro Renovation
Retro Renovation

Retro Renovation

Remodel & decorate in Mid Century Style

  • Home
  • Kitchens
  • Bathrooms
  • Blog
  • Exterior
  • Other Rooms
  • Decorate
  • The “Museum”
  • Be Safe/Renovate Safe
Home / Kitchen / Readers and Their Kitchens

Scott started with one adorable vintage dinette — and built a picture perfect kitchen around it!

Pam Kueber - Updated: October 1, 2021

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

affordable mid century kitchenHow to pull together a picture-perfect vintage-style kitchen? Reader Scott started with one favorite piece — a vintage kitchen dinette — and designed his whole new kitchen around it. With this sweetheart mid century style kitchen, Scott also shows us how to combine new materials with vintage appliances and decor. I spoke with Scott on the phone recently to find out more about his resources and how he pulled this delightful vintage green, white and bit o’ aqua color scheme — so easy on the eyes! — together.

affordable mid century kitchen designScott first connected with me to share photos of an amazing stash of St. Regis Panelyte laminate samples. He mentioned his new kitchen, too, and by golly, Happy New Year!

Keeping costs low was important, Scott told me, because this is actually the second kitchen in the house. Yes, he built it in the basement as a place to showcase his vintage appliances and family collectibles. He’s always loved retro and vintage, he said, and when he and his family built their house about 15 years ago, they considered making the main kitchen retro. Ultimately, though, they decided to go with a more contemporary look upstairs. 

vintage green kitchen dinette

In his first email to me, Scott called this his “man cave” kitchen 🙂 I asked Scott why he liked retro style so much. He said:

You know, that’s a good question. I have liked old stuff since is as little. I was interested in old stuff since I was 10 years ago. People told me I had an old soul, was born in the wrong time period.

vintage green kitchen dinetteThe table and chairs are the colors that Scott started with. He pulled the green from the dinette chair upholstery into the checkerboard flooring, and there are lots of 1940s-1950s greens in the accessories. Meanwhile, the tablecloth, countertop and paint bring in light aqua, a lovely complement to the green.

vintage hoosier cabinetScott said the Hoosier cabinet — a real statement piece in this kitchen! — was in his house growing up. He thinks it’s from the 1940s, inherited by his parents. It’s been painted at least once, but that enameled pull-out top looks original to me. What a sweet piece to keep in the family all these many decades!

vintage pyrexHe also had collected the dinette, lots of memorabilia, family dishes and more. Mixing bowls also are from from grandparents when they got married in 1947. The rotary phone on the wall works. There’s all that pink depression glass. He had lots to display!

1950 frigidaire rangeThe 1950 Frigidaire stove belonged to Scott’s grandparents and comes with lots of fond memories. He spent every weekend there growing up and says that his Grandmother left the stove light on every night as a night light. Oh my!

The 1959 ceiling light fixture (visible in the lead shot of the whole kitchen) also came from his grandparent’s house. He swapped it out when they sold they house.

vintage frigidaire refrigeratorOne of the single largest expenses in the kitchen was having the vintage 1956 Frigidaire Imperial Cold Pantry refrigerator rebuilt.

vintage frigidaire refrigeratorFor this task, Scott chose Antique Appliances of Clayton, Georgia.

refrigerator butter holder with separate temperature controlsScott says the refrigerator has lots of great features — like the butter storage compartment with its own temperature control. And oh my gosh, in the photo just before: that fold-down drawer compartment in the door of the fridge!

  • Note, Antique Appliances is also on my list of 28 places to buy restored vintage stoves

kohler delafield kitchen sinkTo keep costs under control — this is a second kitchen, after all — Scott chose relatively inexpensive stock cabinets from Lowes. Hardware is from Amerock. He used professionals to install the cabinets. He recognized that vintage kitchens in the 40s and 50s were most likely to have featured slab doors with radius edges — but that really would have bumped up the cost. 

Readers will recognize our go-to kitchen sink — the Kohler Delafield with hudee ring. Scott declared:

“I had to have the metal ring, that was a necessity!”

For the countertop, Scott used a favorite-of-blog-readers retro countertop — Wilsonart’s Betty laminate. 

The countertop edging came from one of the vendors he found here on the blog. At first Scott had trouble finding someone to install the edging. But then he discovered a neighbor with countertop expertise who was willing to give it a try.

Scott added the vintage Washington Line sink vents after seeing a story about where to buy them New Old Stock here on the blog. 

kohler delafield sinkThe checkerboard floor pattern was created using Congoleum Floor AL-86 Spruce — a white with a lot of green in it, and Emerald Lace AL-18. One of the patterns already was discontinued when Scott was ready to buy, but he found leftover stock on Wayfair. Never give up, readers! The installers got a kick out of the throwback look, he said:

“The flooring guys really liked it, they were taking pictures of it.”

Scott said he is still thinking about what to put in the open wall space above the sink.

scroll woodwork in a vintage kitchen

Scott said that talented family members helped with much of the special wood trim, including the open shelving, the what-not shelves around the sink, and the decorative scrollwork. In fact, the family found the template for the scrollwork in his father-in-law’s shop! His uncle who does woodworking on side, and his dad too, did the shelving. 

affordable mid century kitchenRepeating the lead photo here, it’s also interesting that this kitchen has an open “fourth wall”. That is, it’s wide open to the rest of the basement. Sounds like Scott is still working on the rest of the space (yes, he has more collections to showcase). And next up, he says, is an bathroom using Daltile Aqua Glow tile — He said that Jim and Nanette’s bathroom is his inspiration. That said, his bathroom may not use A LOT of tile, because the quote to create a tiled shower came in higher than he wanted. So he’s noodling some ideas to get the look without breaking the basement fun bank. Hey, we love retro on a budget — can’t wait to see!

vintage kitchen design
Fabulous family photo!

What a happy kitchen, Scott — I’m betting it will provide its own inspiration to lots of other readers! Thank you so much for sharing all these photographs and resources — and for keeping all those family memories alive in your man cave kitchen — for another generation! xoxo – Pam

CATEGORIES:
Kitchen Readers and Their Kitchens

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

  • steel-kitchen cabinets
    The Retro Renovation® Encyclopedia of Vintage Steel Kitchen Cabinets
  • electro sink center 1963
    1963 Electro-Sink Center: The most wonderful kitchen faucet ever?!
  • be safe renovate safe graphic
    Make a resolution to: Be Safe and Renovate Safe!
  • steel kitchen cabinets by moya living
    Steel kitchen cabinets -- 4 places to buy them made new today
  • Renovating a midcentury kitchen: 12 key resources to help get you started

Reader Interactions

Comments are closed. 

65 comments

Comments

  1. Nancy Essenpreis says

    January 6, 2020 at 1:39 pm

    Amazing work! Keep it up! It is like a living museum.

  2. Barbara says

    January 6, 2020 at 1:21 pm

    Maybe a vintage mirror over the sink? It would bounce the light around the room.

    Love this kitchen!

  3. Eartha Kitsch says

    January 6, 2020 at 1:04 pm

    It sounds like he will soon have his basement ready for me to move into! Well done, Scott. That kitchen is absolute perfection!

  4. carolyn says

    January 6, 2020 at 12:33 pm

    I’ve gone to a lot of estate sales and came to expect rumpus rooms and bars in the basement but was always surprised to see a kitchen down there. My theory is that the family stated gettignng bigger so there was a need for extra stove and fridge space. Mom wanted new K appliances but didn’t “really” want to get rid of the old fridge & stove” because they still work good”, so down in the basement they went. Of course, then the dinette went down too for the teenagers.
    So glad Scott’s extended family were onboard. Nice job all the way around.

    • Pam Kueber says

      January 6, 2020 at 2:23 pm

      Also, before air conditioning was so common, cooking in the basement during hot summers may have been preferred….

      • retro retro says

        January 6, 2020 at 8:36 pm

        …especially if they were using the 2nd kitchen for summer canning…

        • Amber says

          January 12, 2020 at 1:28 am

          Very good point! My mom still likes to can tomatoes and in her words ‘tomatoes come ripe at the worst possible time for canning, the hottest part of the year!’

          But really, many things you want to can get ripe when it’s hot, and before air conditioning? It must have been oppressive. You can see where the phrase ‘if you can’t stand the heat, get out of the kitchen!’ Came from. But perhaps determined women simply went from the first kitchen to the second, cooler kitchen downstairs.

  5. Carolyn Hatcher says

    January 6, 2020 at 12:23 pm

    What an awesome idea! I love this sweet family that we met at church.

  6. Tarquin says

    January 6, 2020 at 11:16 am

    One of the best retro renovations I’ve seen yet.
    This looked like a lot of work. It certainly helped that Scott had his family pitch in. Usually family & friends are horrified & want today’s times (no walls & barely any furniture).
    I totally love his attention to detail. He even put in vents under the kitchen sink. Pam recently wrote an article about that.
    I love the black & white photo of the family at the end, it’s so 1950’s. The only way anyone can tell that it isn’t the 40’s or 50’s is the Dasani water in the refrigerator.
    I suggest a rooster above the sink.
    Everybody agrees that this was a fantastic job.

  7. Lisa says

    January 6, 2020 at 11:12 am

    I love it!

    Maybe one of those cat clocks with the tail that is the pendulum over the sink?

    • Marilyn says

      January 6, 2020 at 12:19 pm

      That’s the way I would go… or some 50’s clock in another style for that space…I love the look of all this…

  8. Nancy says

    January 6, 2020 at 11:10 am

    What an inspiration! I love the green and aqua together. I’d probably think of a mirror over the sink to bounce light around since there are no windows. Also, it helps to see what’s going on over your shoulder when you’re up to your elbows in suds. 🙂

  9. Laura Euler says

    January 6, 2020 at 11:01 am

    Put a fake window over the sink! Find an old 50s window and either paint the glass white and backlight it, or find a cheerful, fun 50s outdoor image–kids playing on a swing set?–and glue it on the wall, then put the window over it!

  10. Karin Jeffrey says

    January 6, 2020 at 10:43 am

    This is so homey and welcoming.

« Older Comments
Newer Comments »

Primary Sidebar


Footer

Follow Along

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • RENOVATE SAFE
  • About
  • Blog
  • The “Museum”
  • Kitchens
  • Bathrooms
  • Exterior
  • Other Rooms
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Notice
  • Disclosures
  • Contact

© 2026 Retro Renovation® • All Rights Reserved • Website by Anchored Design
Please do not use any materials without prior permission. Portrait by Keith Talley Photography