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08-01-2018 04:41 PM
After 20 years of waiting, it's finally gonna happen. Problem is, I am totally at a loss as where to begin. I go and look at all the products (counter tops, sinks, backsplash, flooring, cabinets) and I am very confused. Where do I start???? Does anyone know of a program to design a kitchen so I can add colors and different flooring and cabinets, etc so I can get an actual picture of what it would look like?
08-01-2018 04:50 PM
Hi, @Equuleus! How exciting to get your kitchen redone! A friend of mine here in the Vegas area just had hers redone. She used a kitchen designer, who was able to pass along her discounts on the various items on to her. A designer could help with color selection and redesign of the area if you are thinking of moving things around. Another option are firms that specialize in kitchen renovation/showrooms like Ferguson to get ideas. We redid our kitchen years ago when we lived in Huntington Beach and used a company that specialized in kitchen cabinets; what was to be a refacing of cabinets ended up being a full gut job. Hopefully, some of this helps you!
08-01-2018 04:53 PM
I would start with looking at photos on pinterest and online at kitchens. See if there are any that you like.
08-01-2018 04:54 PM
Start with a budget and a good contractor. Your budget will be your guide and will eliminate a lot of "noise" or choices that can be confusing. A good contractor will give you a line-item bid showing exact costs: demo, electrical, plumbing, drywall, flooring, cabinets, countertops etc. Make sure contractor is licensed, and hires licensed electrician and plumber who pull necessary permits. This is the only way you'll have leverage and recourse if something goes wrong. Good luck! (Sorry, I don't know of any design websites, but I'm sure they exist -- maybe you can google?)
08-01-2018 04:55 PM
@Equuleus wrote:After 20 years of waiting, it's finally gonna happen. Problem is, I am totally at a loss as where to begin. I go and look at all the products (counter tops, sinks, backsplash, flooring, cabinets) and I am very confused. Where do I start???? Does anyone know of a program to design a kitchen so I can add colors and different flooring and cabinets, etc so I can get an actual picture of what it would look like?
Start with the item you are most passionate about. The cabinets? The counter top? The floor? Pick one, them base your other choices around it.
08-01-2018 05:26 PM
@Equuleus wrote:After 20 years of waiting, it's finally gonna happen. Problem is, I am totally at a loss as where to begin. I go and look at all the products (counter tops, sinks, backsplash, flooring, cabinets) and I am very confused. Where do I start???? Does anyone know of a program to design a kitchen so I can add colors and different flooring and cabinets, etc so I can get an actual picture of what it would look like?
We remodeled 3 bathrooms (including the master) recently. Took it all to the studs. I looked into those "all inclusive" companies that will design and do all the work. However, I found them to be way too expensive and, for the most part, they want you to choose your materials with them (cabinets, tile, faucets, countertops, etc.) The price they work up for you is all materials that are the least expensive and not the most attractive. Of course you'll want to pick out the nicer more expensive stuff. It took us months to find a contractor, like 8 months or more. Maybe it's just my area but so many contractors would come in and first thing they'd say is "well...a master bathroom starts at $30,000 in this area." One all inclusive company wouldn't even consider working with you if it didn't start at $60,000. NO LIE! Crazy, I know. I started looking on line at pinterest and other sites like that to get ideas. Then I'd go to a granite/quartz place to look at slabs of countertops. The counter tops and cabinets are the most important, IMO. Each time I found a slab that I really, really liked and then everything else was picked out to match. I did go to Ferguson to look at faucets, sinks, etc., but they were way overpriced. I ended up going to a local company for sinks, faucets and tubs and they were fabulous! Still expensive, but not things you'd get off the shelves at Home Depot but still less than Ferguson. My biggest tip is, besides finding a contractor, have everything picked out first. Run it by the contractor is you have problems/questions and order it and have it on site BEFORE work starts. Buy extra tile, always need more and always good to have extra. Remember that you'll need your sinks and faucets picked out so the fabricator for the countertops know what to cut. I did not think I could go to these places and know what I'm doing and pick out what I wanted and make it all work but at the same time I felt I know what I like more than a designer would. Going to a designer or an all inclusive company probably would be easier, but you're going to pay for them to do all that. Another tip if you go the route of finding materials on your own, have it delivered or pick it up yourself. Most contractors will charge you for their time to do that. Good luck. Try not to stress about it. It can be a lot of fun.
08-01-2018 05:45 PM
@Equuleus - Definitely have a budget and time frame in mind. Keep in mind, it will probably cost more and take longer than you expect.
When I redid my kitchen, I went to several kitchen designers and picked one from that line-up. He did the drawings from which we made some changes.
Once we were ready to shop he took me to all the stores and did the ordering. Easy Peasy. Saved a lot of stress & headaches.
08-01-2018 05:45 PM
I like fairiemoon's idea. There must be one item you are passionate about, a granite counter, stainless appliances, perhaps scraped oak hardwood floors. Make sure you get that one item and move on from there. 11 years later I am still sorry I settled for Formica counters instead of granite.
08-01-2018 05:51 PM
@faeriemoon and @depglass I have read that also. Start with the countertop or cabinets, whichever is your main focus. I do think it's the countertop because that was the one thing I disliked the most - lack of countertop (and what is there now is hideous). I already know what cabinets I want. I'm trying to think of it all at once. I have to take it one step at a time. I'm just so excited.
08-01-2018 05:58 PM
@ScrapHappy wrote:
@Equuleus wrote:After 20 years of waiting, it's finally gonna happen. Problem is, I am totally at a loss as where to begin. I go and look at all the products (counter tops, sinks, backsplash, flooring, cabinets) and I am very confused. Where do I start???? Does anyone know of a program to design a kitchen so I can add colors and different flooring and cabinets, etc so I can get an actual picture of what it would look like?
We remodeled 3 bathrooms (including the master) recently. Took it all to the studs. I looked into those "all inclusive" companies that will design and do all the work. However, I found them to be way too expensive and, for the most part, they want you to choose your materials with them (cabinets, tile, faucets, countertops, etc.) The price they work up for you is all materials that are the least expensive and not the most attractive. Of course you'll want to pick out the nicer more expensive stuff. It took us months to find a contractor, like 8 months or more. Maybe it's just my area but so many contractors would come in and first thing they'd say is "well...a master bathroom starts at $30,000 in this area." One all inclusive company wouldn't even consider working with you if it didn't start at $60,000. NO LIE! Crazy, I know. I started looking on line at pinterest and other sites like that to get ideas. Then I'd go to a granite/quartz place to look at slabs of countertops. The counter tops and cabinets are the most important, IMO. Each time I found a slab that I really, really liked and then everything else was picked out to match. I did go to Ferguson to look at faucets, sinks, etc., but they were way overpriced. I ended up going to a local company for sinks, faucets and tubs and they were fabulous! Still expensive, but not things you'd get off the shelves at Home Depot but still less than Ferguson. My biggest tip is, besides finding a contractor, have everything picked out first. Run it by the contractor is you have problems/questions and order it and have it on site BEFORE work starts. Buy extra tile, always need more and always good to have extra. Remember that you'll need your sinks and faucets picked out so the fabricator for the countertops know what to cut. I did not think I could go to these places and know what I'm doing and pick out what I wanted and make it all work but at the same time I felt I know what I like more than a designer would. Going to a designer or an all inclusive company probably would be easier, but you're going to pay for them to do all that. Another tip if you go the route of finding materials on your own, have it delivered or pick it up yourself. Most contractors will charge you for their time to do that. Good luck. Try not to stress about it. It can be a lot of fun.
@ScrapHappy This is interesting because I just had a call back today from an inclusive company and he told me that my home has to be brought up to code and a 12 x 6 bathroom starts at $40k. My house was built in 1993 and he said the building codes changed in 1994. I've had several other quotes from non-inclusive and they ranged from $2500 for a refresh to $10k for a remodel.
I need to ask my neighbors if they had to bring their homes up to code in order to remodel.
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