In My Home This Week: In the Pink!

 


As with most of the kitchens I've been featuring this one is from the early to mid 1940's.  Why so fascinated with this time period?  Lots of reasons, really.  Number One is the often imaginative and awesome use of color.  As one who has seen quite enough white and grey interiors these past ten years,  I simply adore the colors.  

Second is that the kitchens are often real work horses with many functions encompassed in one modest room.  The use of space is nothing short of brilliant.  

Third, I love that these kitchens still have some form of dining space, either as the only room in which to eat a meal or as a less formal space.    Honestly I've never quite liked the dining nook in the living room (which is what I have now).  I sort of like the table in the kitchen.  My dislike of it in my present home was that the eating area (where I now have my kitchen sitting spot) was simply too small for a full sized table and full sized family to eat in though we did cram ourselves in that space for the first 14 years we lived here.  


This kitchen has a lovely color scheme in my opinion.  It's at once both feminine and practical.  The pink is well tempered by the black and white colors used in the room.   That flooring isn't likely to show half as much dirt as a lighter colored floor or at least so I believe.  I think the pink and white breaking up the black would help disguise some of the dirt.  However, I am mindful that the current trend of dark wood floors did indeed show up every speck of dust and every crumb, so I might well be wrong.  

Now for a change of pace we'll start off to our right and work our way counter clockwise about this room.   

I'll just lay odds that the kitchen table and chairs set were something the homeowner already had and 'made do' with.   In just glancing at the picture I thought at first the tabletop was painted with a pattern but it's placemats and napkins in the perfect shade of pink to match our room.

I'm going to assume our kitchen is thoroughly modern and has a fridge tucked into the wall to the right perhaps with a small countertop between it and the stove.    The stove of course, is one of those big ones I admire so.  And next to that is a counter space that appears to be the baking center.  I like a nice bit of countertop next to my stove where I can chop vegetables or mix up a batch of cookies, don't you?  

Note that the wall here appears to be tiled from floor to top of cabinets.  Given that most of the other kitchen done by Hazel Dell Brown used linoleum on the walls (and having seen something very similar to this product in Granny's home), and counter tops,  I'll just bet that those 'tiles' are vinyl.  Honestly, I can't imagine anything more practical!  Just think how easily it was wiped down!

I suppose if you can't have a window right over the sink the next best thing is to have a window right beside your work spaces and this is a big lovely window.  I like that the frou frou curtains were left off and while the black ribbon on the venetian blinds might look stark in another room, it's the right amount of accent for this room.  It didn't need the frilly curtains with the color scheme and polka dot wall paper.

Now turn to your left and there is our kitchen sink.  Based on size, I'm thinking this might well be one of those styles with a sink and drainboards either side which is handy as can be.   I had one of those old metal cabinet sinks with the cast iron and porcelain sink and drainboard on either side in the house I loved best and I have to say that it was one thing I never squawked about wanting to change though the kitchen itself was dismal to work in.     The planter is a nice touch, too.   And yet, the homemaker can easily look right over that raised countertop.

Coming around the corner from the sink cabinet, we have a tidy work station: sewing machine that can be closed up to use as a desk.  Telephone near so the homemaker doesn't have to leave the room to answer it.  She needs only to pull the chair from the dining table to have her seating for sewing or paperwork.   

Right around that end I was most intrigued by this counter top.  Being the modern day homemaker I am, my first thought was "Oh here's the washer and dryer!"  Nope it's not.  It is storage and possibly a cabinet style hot water heater.  It's also the right height to be a cutting table for sewing.  Note that she has her iron set up there as well.

And then there's the washer and the baby's play pen within easy reach.   As I said, one thing I do admire is the workhorses these small kitchens are designed to be.   It rather makes me ashamed of the separate rooms I have for sewing and laundry and such.  

The only item I'm uncertain of is what is hanging in that little nook above the washer.  I'm assuming it might be a heat proof pad to iron on?  Anyone else have a guess?

Well there you have our kitchen for this week.   Let me know what you think about the colors used, the various functions, etc.  And share if you've seen any features you'd love to have in your current kitchen that you've seen here.  

Work This Week:  

As usual, now that the weather is warming, I am anxious to get busy with a dozen projects.  And as usual, the very things I want most to do require some purchase or another.  Sam asked me to sit with the kids while he ran to Lowe's today and I requested he get me two bags of mulch and one bag of moisture control potting soil.  Now I can tackle the bed about the faith tree.  I'll need to remove the stones, dig out some of the growth under the weed mat and replace the weed mat and then I can mulch lightly.  I will put some mulch around the baby tree I planted last year that has sprung to live once again.  I expect that's about as far as those two bags will go but it's a start.  

The potting soil will be used in repotting houseplants or potting up rooted bits of coleus, ivy, etc. that I've had wintering over in the kitchen window.  I have African violet soil and some Orchid bark in the shed that I'll get out too and see if I can repot the older African violets and one of my orchids that isn't doing too well.  I'm pretty sure I won't have any potting soil leftover to repot Dianthus and Angelonia and such that are growing in pots outdoors but if I can I will.  

We will try to make it out to the cemetery for an hour or so at least 3 days.  I'm at the stage now where I have a lot of weeding that must be done now in flower beds so I'm not going to over do it in the cemetery.

See if we can't borrow Sam's hand trucks and get the dryer out to my shed.  I am not liking at all having a washer and dryer sitting on my back porch.  It's a bit too rural country to suit me.  I'll encourage John to move the washer out behind the pump house or into his second shed, too.  You know, while he's got the hand trucks over here. 

Ponder the patio.  I removed the chairs from the table a couple of years ago and put them on the front porch.  I found we really did need the extra seating on the porch when we had family here, however the dogs spend more time in the seats than people do.  I'm not so keen on that aspect of it.   Second is that I had grand plans of us grilling and eating on the patio.  Not gonna happen.  Much as John likes the idea of picnics, he loathes eating outside here at our own home because he says that dogs hang about too much, sigh.  They aren't the begging sorts but they do like to be near us and this is offensive to John when he's eating.   So do I want to keep the table and chairs?  Do I want to pass them on to someone else?   And what do I do with that blank slate patio that I've been trying to figure out how best to use for the past 25 years?  Truth is, it's long and narrow.  If chairs are put too close to the house they get drips from the eave every morning, not just rainy ones.  It's just a problem area for me that seems useless.  So this week I will ponder the patio.   

Continue to clean the kitchen cabinets doors.  

I'm calling it a Zone Free week which means I'll do whatever tasks I see need doing.  

I hope to go donate items to the thrift store.

I'm going to plan a day out on this week.  John has a lunch date out and I've plenty of things I want to get done that I haven't been able to get to.

I have to get my mind wrapped around several different lists I need to make.  I need certain items but tend to order them piecemeal.  I'd rather just do one shop and get them all at once but I really need a list to purchase by.    I also have a to do list I need to make out for something coming up mid-April.  And April Goals must be set, etc., etc.  

Kitchen Work:





Restock my kitchen with items from the pantry.  I typically will just run to the pantry to retrieve what I want, one item at a time.  Lots of wasted steps and never at convenient times.  I need to replenish the cabinets with the more basic items I use most frequently.

Figure out what to make from the other expired items in my box of things that are out of date.

Pack up some picnic supplies. It's getting warmer and it's better weather for picnics once more. 

Meals this week:  Pepperoni Pizza for lunch and then I had leftovers and John had an egg salad sandwich.

Italian Chicken Pasta, Mixed Salad

Cubed Steaks, Squash Casserole, Coleslaw

Mac and Cheese,  Roasted Italian Vegetables

Chicken  and Chick Pea Tikka Masala, Rice, Sliced Cucumbers, Naan

Tomato Soup and Cheese Sandwiches (this on John's day out. He eats a big lunch and won't want a heavy supper)

Pesto Chicken, Rice, Green Salad

Personal:


I thought I'd change this section up to reflect the fact that generally it's personal things I put here rather than leisure exactly.

I so enjoyed my little spa day last week that I feel I should schedule another one.

Plan wardrobe out for April.   I confess I have leaned heavily upon the new pieces this month and not incorporated as much of my older things as I'd meant to.  I pushed myself to wear a shirt I had planned for the March wardrobe on Friday and I realized that I don't much care for it.  Not as in "I don't want to wear that" but more that I don't want to wear it anywhere except at home.  So another piece moves to the house drawer.   I'm a little excited to choose wardrobe items this month because the weather is likely going to be warmer more often than not and that means I can choose different pieces than I've had to choose from these past few months.

Create a reading stack for April.  That means admitting that I simply am not going to pick up that Harriet Beecher Stowe biography and putting it back on the shelf for now.

Work on a post for the Roots and Rabbit Trails blog.

Make a point of doing a daily Bible reading.

Make it a point to do a daily journal entry.

Continue watching "Victoria".  We started season 3 Friday night.

13 comments:

Traveling Oltmans said...

I just adore these old kitchen photos, plus I read your comments and follow along to see what you see. The pink kitchen, although the color gives me a rash, is fantastic, what a great use of space. Thank you for including all these photos ;)

Stephanie said...

Have you considered doing a container garden on the patio? Maybe a nice potted tomato plant or two, a rosemary plant, dwarf lemon trees, etc? The plants would collect the moisture from the roof run off and the dogs couldn't dig in them.

terricheney said...

Stephanie, that was one thought I had about how to get best use of the space. I have rosemary planted in the yard but I might move my 'kitchen' garden to that patio. I know I need to move the pink stair step planter that John bought me for our anniversary a couple of years ago and it would fit my color scheme out front. Something to definitely think about!

Traveling Oltman's I'm not a pink person either. but I do like the depth of color used rather than a bubblegum color and the use of space is amazing.

Deanna said...

I love these vintage kitchens and totally agree about them being actual working kitchens. I think a lot of what we see in magazines are made for people who don't actually cook. ;)

The nook above the washing machine contains a fold-down ironing board. If you look closely you can see that there is an open cabinet door on it. It's a great idea and something I've told my husband I'd like him to build for me in our laundry room.

Chris M said...

Oh my! The colors in this kitchen brought back some memories. My parents married mid 1940’s and my mother set out to have a black and pink color decorating scheme. She really never got to see it through with moves, etc.; but that was her plan. I think, even at 10, I found that a bit interesting given what I knew of my mother. By the 50’s she’d changed her mind and did our kitchen in yellow and brown. Those were some bright cupboards! Eventually, she settled on earth tones. The 70’s were good for her.

Pots on the porch might just do the trick. Some animal was sitting on something outside where I didn’t want them to. I took a piece of that plastic carpet protector (usually in a hallway) and put it on the seat upside down so that the points were sticking up. It was easy enough to to remove when I wanted to sit down. Did the trick.

Chef Owings said...

I would ask where the dogs are at when you are eating in the home? We have found if Hubby faces the table, he has the habit of turning to see the road instead, the dogs don't mill around while we are eating outside. I also don't allow the dogs (Charlotte sits in the ones on the kitchen porch) to sit in the chairs on the deck ( where we eat out even though the grill is on the front porch as it has a roof) I turn them upside down when we are not sitting in them so she can't sit on them when we aren't around.

I don't mind the pink. I had a pink kitchen once but the busyness of the floor would drive me batty

Lana said...

I've tried but I am just not a fan of the kitchens with so much stuffed into such a small space. My kitchen is really big and open so that is what I am used to and like. My husband trips over every corner in a compact space so I consider that too as well as the fact that we always cook together.

Off subject but something we have discussed here in the past. I accidentally found a way to keep cucumbers without them rotting. I have two of those long Rubbermaid produce keepers and always keep celery in one and regular carrots in the other. One day I had a part of a cucumber and just tossed it in the carrot box and It kept for a very long time and I have done it over and over with success. Plus the carrots are keeping better. Weird but they seem to be companion good keepers. I cut the celery to length for the box when I buy it and don't wash it. It has been keeping a good two months in the box.

Tammy said...

Looks like a small fold-down ironing board in that niche above the washer.
Does anyone iron anything anymore? I do when I sew, but for clothes, I use a steamer. I was thinking the other day that I was about Layla's age when I learned to iron pillow cases. I'm not giving a hot iron to Layla, but we learned things at a younger age back then, didn't we?

LaFe said...

Hi hello :)
I think the mistery object is an ironing board, nice and tucked away so it doesn't gent into your daily task in the kitchen..
have a nice day
Federica

terricheney said...

Okay, even though I had opened the image in a much larger view I simply didn't notice that cabinet door above the washing machine. I think everyone is quite right but thank you Dee for pointing out that there was a door. It helped me 'see' it!

Tammy like yourself, I iron when I'm sewing and never at any other time. Most of my clothes hang dry so wrinkles are considerably decreased but noted that John washed two of my Stitch fix pieces with what might have been warm water (I'll set aside and do them myself in future) and the could definitely use a bit of steaming. I don't have a steamer but might resort to a damp towel in the dryer to see if that helps.
Like you I started ironing very young. I was 7 when Mama set me at the iron and I did all Daddy's handkerchiefs which he always carried. By 9 I was doing all the ironing for the family which often meant I spent 10 hours on a Saturday at the ironing board with five people in the house and every blessed thing being either cotton or wool...That's why I so loathe ironing now!

Lana, YES! I bought one of those produce keepers at the suggestion of Louise (Weezie) a couple of years ago and find it quite handy for asparagus and cucumbers but I had not tried putting celery in...I might have to order another one or two of these. They would certainly stack easily and I do consider it a worthwhile thing to have. Zucchini will keep well too even if you've cut a portion of it.

Juls, I live in a very mild climate and suffer from pet allergies, so my dogs are outdoors doggies as is my cat. They all have more than adequate shelter and if we have severe weather in winter I will give them still more coverage and blankets and rugs and such to insure they stay warm. Maddie would just die if she had to come indoors. The cat only comes in long enough to complain that I haven't fed her and Rufus would happily be an indoor/outdoor pet but he saves that for Bess's house. I can't have him indoors here.

Chris, I am torn about the dogs and the chairs. It's River and Rufus who sit in the them and the cat. Rufus and Misu are old pets (both around 10-12 years) and I hate to deny them the comfort...But loathe the idea of sitting on a dirty cushion, too! I've told John when these pets go to their final rest, I'm not allowing them on the porches, but you know, I talk big and then my heart softens.

I'm a fan of white cabinets and appliances. I love the bright look of the room with so much white in it, BUT that is no doubt a result of many dark wood and too few windows in my previous homes.

Frederica, Thank you! I know you and the others are quite right. So nice to see you comment!

Karen in WI said...

I love this kitchen! So much work in one space and the baby can watch you from the playpen! I don’t know when laundry rooms came into being, but I really do like the idea of this kitchen for a smaller home. I too love the color! I find all the white and gray to be so boring. My kitchen has hickory cabinets with cream counters and beige walls, but then I have cobalt blue gingham curtains with red and cobalt accents all around the kitchen. I would paint the kitchen a color, but have a hard time deciding what would go well with the wood color.

I have seen ironing board cabinets like that. My husband actually irons his shirt every day before work. After I had our second child, he just took over and made it a habit. I still iron a few things here and there as I am not good about getting things out of the dryer right away. All of my boys know how to iron as their dad taught them. They would come up to him on Sunday morning and ask to iron their polo shirt. I think they just wanted to feel grown up!

I like the idea of homemade tomato soup and cheese sandwiches so I am adding that to our menu. Well, off to gather supper together. Hugs to you and have a lovely evening!

terricheney said...

Karen, I am queen of paint samples, lol. They are stuck all over my home in various rooms on various walls and I try to contemplate them in all sorts of lights. I have yet to choose paint.
That said, what color speaks to you most? If you can find a stain sample that matches your cabinets it would be easy enough to choose a sample to match the counters and then pair paints with those. I pretty much have only my carpet and flooring to worry with as the cabinetry is white so no big problem other than making myself commit.

Karen in WI said...

I wish I had white cabinets as it makes it much easier to pick any color for the walls! Our kitchen/dining is open to our family room which has khaki walls and then warmer colors in an area rug. I feel that makes it even trickier to pick a color for the kitchen. Maybe some day I will change colors in both the kitchen and family room at the same time.

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