California Gardener's November Checklist

Other than the smell of a turkey roasting in the oven or the sight of a quarterback tossing a football to a receiver at the flat, nothing makes me feel much better about November compared to a persimmon tree completely loaded with glistening orange fruit among foliage turning a matching color.

That is a plant that says a lot about gardening in California, and maybe about California in general. Native to Asia, it’s made itself home from the state. It’s simple to grow. It is quirky — that the fruit of the most typical species is so sterile that you can not eat it until frost or time softens it.

Naturally, this persimmon is also a reminder of distinctive California’s plants and gardening climate are — and also the number of awesome things we can do in the garden this month when much of the nation is moving indoors for an annual hibernation.

If you don’t have space for a persimmon tree, then just purchase some of the veggies and maintain them on the counter for a couple weeks. Or at least browse this homage to the persimmon from Gary Snyder, California’s most haunted modern nature poet.

Glenna Partridge Garden Design

Grow bulbs. Like nearly everything else that has to do with growing bulbs in California, placing them in containers calls for a few twists. You need to compensate for the lack of winter chill required by the majority of bulbs and to the shallower planting thickness in a kettle. Here are a few methods for planting the most popular bulbs — tulips and daffodils — in containers.

Choose terra-cotta or plastic pots that are at least 8 inches in diameter — just as large as 14 inches for larger daffodils.
For an 8-inch kettle, use five or six bulbs. To get a 14-inch pot, use as many as 15 to 20.
Add 3 inches of good soil mix, industrial or your own, preferably including fertilizer, towards the bottom of the pot. Place bulbs on top; the flat sides of tulip bulbs must all point in precisely the exact same direction. For the greatest splash, pack bulbs closely together.
Cover bulbs with sufficient dirt to reach to 2 inches under the pot’s rim. Water thoroughly, then set the pots in a cool, frost-free spot outdoors.
Pile a minimum of two inches of compost on top for security. Keep the soil moist.
When foliage begins to poke through the dirt in late winter or spring (gently scrape back the mulch occasionally to test), remove the mulch carefully along with the transfer pots to a sunny spot.
Water often enough to keep the soil moist until flowering finishes.

Fireside play with. As bold as a piece of sculpture, this steel background adds a sense of theater — along with a measure of safety for nearby plants — into the flame pit. Produced by Koning Eizenberg Architecture of Santa Monica, California, the piece is a 8-by-8 steel sheet attached into a steel framework behind the rectangular concrete fire pit. The steel is oiled to detain rust. Cor-Ten steel, available in sheets like plywood, 3/16 or 1/4 inch thick, is typically used for heavy-duty landscape situations such as this.

Monrovia

Previewing the new and hot (and blue). In a recent seminar of the American Society of Landscape Architects, I had a chance to see what Monrovia nursery believes its hottest new plants. Standouts included ‘Winter Bee’ lavender, ‘Limelight’ rugged hydrangea and ‘Angel Red’ pomegranate.

Most impressive for me was ‘Bountiful Blue’ blueberry. The “blue” from the name doesn’t come in the berries but out of the strong blue cast of the foliage. The blossoms are fairly too: white and small, with a pink blush.

The handsome, compact shrub grows 3 to 4 feet tall. Plant a range of these in rows for an agrarian texture or in masses. Or just plant one or 2 at a shrub border or container.

This blueberry’s most important claim to fame is its ability to thrive and bear a tasty crop past the customary blueberry range (it takes much less winter chill compared to traditional blueberries). A landscape architect told me well ‘Bountiful Blue’ works in her Santa Barbara backyard. That’s a long way, geographically and climatically, from traditional blueberry country — which you understand is Maine if you’ve read Blueberries for Sal for your kids.

Missouri Botanical Garden

Sowing wildflowers and busting myths. Sorry if I am disillusioning anyone, but growing wildflowers in the home isn’t just an issue of scattering seeds, waiting for winter storms, then in spring romping through a meadow of gold poppies, tidy methods and shooting stars. (Do not you love those titles? Were our great-grandparents or whoever did the naming natural-born antiques?)

The fact of California annual wildflowers is that they developed to thrive under very specific conditions of moisture, sun and warmth, and growing most types requires some care. However, the wildflower that is easiest to grow can also be the best known and the most in-your-face gorgeous: the California poppy, either its normal form (shown) or “improved” varieties such as ‘Chiffon’. Other comparatively simple wildflowers include world gilia (Gilia capitata), goldfields (Lastenia glabrata) and ruby chalice clarkia (Clarkia rubicunda).

Mid to late autumn, preferably after the first storms, is the best time to sow California poppy and other wildflowers. (You can also begin with plants in tiny pots offered in early spring.) Select a spot in full sun. You don’t need to cultivate the soil, but eliminate weeds and rake it roughly so seeds have a place to lodge. Cover the dirt with a thin layer of compost and sprinkle it throughly, and stay moist until winter storms do the task for you.

Alder Group, Pool and Landscape Co..

Instead of striving for a meadow effect (which can look kind of shabby-dead after blossom), scatter wildflowers as highlights at a natural-looking landscape, as exhibited here. Combine wildflowers with native shrubs such as ceanothus or with sun-loving perennials such as lavender and salvia. An excellent source of wildflower information in addition to seeds is Larner Seeds of Bolinas, California.

A lesson from minimalism, Arizona style. With just three kinds of stones and plants as a ground cover, this is a striking illustration of what might be called Arizona minimalism (instead of Arizona max, a less sustainable arid-climate approach that utilizes lawns, palm trees and lots of water). Even if you can not grow the totem cactus displayed here, you are able to emulate the keep-it-simple approach.

Fava beans: their humble roots. Half a century before the French Laundry’s menu provided fava beans, the ranchers of the Santa Clara Valley, in which I was growing up, were counting precisely the exact same plant. They called it horse bean, and every drop they planted it into their orchards as a cover crop (“green manure”), which could be plowed back into the floor in spring in order to add nitrogen to the ground.

Growing fava beans nevertheless makes sense. You don’t need an orchard. In a 4- from 10-foot plot, among my neighbors crops favas every fall after she pulls her out berries, has enough beans for some spring meals, then turns over the crops to the ground to enhance the soil to summer plants to come.

The way to grow fava beans. Choose a sunny spot, cultivate the soil and bury seeds 1 inch deep, 4 or 5 inches apart; after seedlings are a few inches tall, thin them to 8 to 10 inches apart. Keep the soil moist winter. Plants grow fast and, as you see here, can grow to be fairly rangy in 3 to 4 feet tall; bet them if you desire a neater appearance.

The New York Botanical Garden

What else can you do in November from the California backyard? Along with the traditional fall chores, such as leaf raking, general cleaning up and up, it is a fantastic time to put in trees trees and all sorts of natives. You are able to plant a new lawn — it is usually much better to go with sod now than seeds. And take advantage of the special planting chances that California offers:

Plant cool-season annuals. Continue to place out seedlings of annual flowers such as calendulas, Iceland poppies, pansies and violas (shown), and snapdragons. For earlier blooms, begin with plants in 2- or 4-inch pots. Be sure to decide on a spot that gets as much winter sun as possible.

Plant cool-season vegetables. These plants are easy to begin from seeds: beets, peas, carrots, radishes, spinach and Swiss chard. These are usually greatest put out as seedlings: broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage and cauliflower. Watch for snails or their slimy telltale trails; place out bait.

Plant spring-blooming bulbs. In November there’s still time to plant all bulbs: crocuses, daffodils, freesias, hyacinths, tulips and ranunculus. Be sure to chill tulips and hyacinths for four to six weeks in the refrigerator before placing them.

Plant perennials. Fall planting gives perennials a chance to build up strong root systems before blooming next spring and summer. Perennials include lavender, coreopsis, salvia and several others.

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Decorate With Intention: Obtain Your Home Office Right

It is really simple to let a home office slip off the base of the decorating to-do list — after all, many visitors will never even see it. However, the way that space is organized and decorated can considerably affect productivity (and happiness) in your home. From finding the proper furniture and space to organizing thoughts, ergonomics, personal style, dealing with distractions and much more, let’s tackle that home office and for all.

Hillary Thomas Designs

Recall the luxury of a home office is that you’re in your home. Do not be afraid to forgo standard office furniture in favor of a style that blends with the rest of your dwelling. A Chippendale-style chair with armrests and a thick pillow is incredibly chic and nearly as comfortable as a traditional desk chair. And unless you prefer the look of a bent-arm task lamp, then nobody is stopping you from picking a glam table lamp with a silk color instead. Do what makes you happy!

Style notes: In this home office space, floral colors dripping with lush trimming set a warm, intimate tone, echoed from the portrait, the floral painting and the bright orange armchair. Glossy black accents soil the arrangement and take the room in an elegant way.

Alan Design Studio

Check your ergonomics. Pay attention to the way you feel after logging a few hours in your desk in your home. If you have any pain or soreness, then it’s time to inspect the ergonomics of your installation.

• Your chair height ought to be adjusted so that your feet can be flat on the ground.
• Align your display with your sight line to avoid eye strain and shoulder stiffness. In case you’ve got a laptop, consider placing it on a rack to adjust the height.
• Check the lumbar support of your chair. Add a cushion or get a new chair if you have been experiencing lower back pain.
• Invest in several cushy pads to keep your wrists raised because you type and use the mouse, especially if you devote a good deal of time in the computer.

CB2

Knitted Poufs – $79.95

Consider adding a pouf. More than only a fun accessory, a pouf of the proper size could be tucked beneath your desk to use as a footrest. If not needed, you can pull it out and use it as a miniature side table for heaps of magazines and books.

Vosgesparis

Move past the desk using an extra work surface. Prevent clutter pileups by putting another work surface near your main desk. This can make it simpler to maintain your computer area clean and clear, and supply dedicated space where you can spread out a project and not worry about cleaning it up. This extra surface (if you’ve got room for it) is an excellent place for integrating meaningful items and art that inspires you. It’s also great for stepping away from the computer every once in a while to brainstorm, read or just sit with a cup of tea.

Style notes: This workspace feels clean and crisp in all white and black. A rotating display of artwork on floating shelves and a 3-D cable deer sculpture keep it sense personal and refreshing.

AVP ARCHITECT VIEW PRODUCTS BY IMASOTO

Do not require a serious office? Bring out your desk to the open. In case you don’t use your home office a great deal, it might make more sense to preserve that spare room for a more practical purpose. Look around your home for another space within a larger room instead. Take advantage of a very long room (like the one displayed here) by putting two desks with each other. Piano stools, vintage schoolhouse seats and café seats are stylish and airy, perfect for occasional usage.

Style notes: A tiled runner around the ground, easy industrial-style pendant lights and clusters of green plants unite to make a greenhouse texture, as well as the lines made by the row of desks and lights draws the eye outside to the patio beyond, expanding the feeling of space.

Cary Bernstein Architect

Add a distinctive zone to keep youngsters occupied. If you have little ones at home, it’s well worth it to create an extra effort to make the office kid-friendly. Sure, in an perfect world, we’d only close the door and everybody would not bother us — but as every parent knows, that is just not how it works.

Consider adding these kid-friendly Characteristics to your own office:
Chalkboard or chalkboard wallPlayhouse or play cupboard that kids can climb intoChild-height activity table and chairsComfy rugBaskets or bins of toys or art supplies
Play kitchen

Domestic Stories with Ivy

Produce privacy within a larger space. Should you not have an whole room to dedicate to your office but really need you, it is still possible to carve out a personal nook with a few space suggestions. You can use an open-backed bookcase for a room divider, placing your desk on the other side (as shown); make a workplace corner by positioning a decorative display; or even put a large potted tree on your desk.

Modern Craft Construction, LLC

Make a closet office more than an afterthought. In case your only accessible office space is in a spare closet, that doesn’t mean it has to feel like second best.

Specifics to Remember when converting a closet into an office:

Lighting is key. Add recessed lighting in the ceiling when possible, and a couple of desk lamps.
In case you can’t find a desk that fits perfectly, have one constructed (or attempt a DIY job) to create the best use of this space.
Quantify potential desk seats before purchasing to be sure they’ll sip under the desk enough to close the door(s).
Speaking of doors, consider setting out the standard-issue cupboard doors for French doors, pocket doors as well as crisp curtains.

MAK Design + Build Inc..

Plan office storage with efficiency in mind. The storage areas directly around your desk — drawers, shelves, cabinets and surfaces — ought to be reserved for frequently used essential items. Should you purchase some office supplies in bulk or possess gear that is extremely rarely used, store it on the highest shelves or in a different room completely if you’re short on space.

Desire to Inspire

Surround yourself with things you love. What do you need to include (or remove) to really love your home office? Give favourite colors, artwork, photos, plants and individual things pride of place, and get rid of (or at least hide in a cupboard) anything that is bumming you out, from nasty tech gear to bulky binders of older work cloth.

Soledad Builders, LLC

Commit to maintaining a clean and clear desktop. For supreme productivity and peace of mind, make a habit of completely clearing off your desk before finishing the day.

Inform us What’s your best tip for a stay-at-home house office?

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A Vertical Park at Zurich Greens Up the Grid

One of the highlights of my trip to Zurich, Switzerland, was MFO Park at the Neu-Oerlikon District, an industrial area transformed with residential housing, schools and offices. The park sits among the newest buildings, and it’s a building in its own right: A steel construction functions as an armature for climbing plants. I first learned about the project. It was completed five years earlier that, and photos show plants just starting up their voyage the arrangement. Half a decade later, the green has engulfed the gray, making for a fabulous atmosphere for citizens and employees in the region.

This ideabook tours the playground, made by Burckhardt + Partner and Raderschall Landschaftsarchitekten. With vertical gardens gaining popularity in residential layout, could it be offer inspiration for creating your own dwelling wall in your home?

John Hill

MFO Park covers a rectangular plot of land. It’s available on both sides, and the other three sides include stairs and walkways for traversing the structure. The whole is covered by a space framework that will someday be covered by vines like a lot of the remainder of the construction.

John Hill

The majority of the region below the roof is just sand, more a walkway than a place for hanging out. Seating is grouped beneath multistory regions on the side and near the regions where the plants climb, which makes sense, as these are where the color is.

John Hill

The structural framework meets with the floor via columns and diagonal bracing. These points are where the crops begin their climb. Given the roughly five-story height of the construction, the designers helped the plants with a raised trench, visible here in which the plants are hanging down.

John Hill

One of the nicest touches is the incorporation of lookouts, which inspire people to trek up through the green arrangement and sit — habit seats occupy the couple lookouts.

John Hill

A group of splayed columns — made up of many diagonal members to the plants — is also a distinctive feature. The columns anchor end of the park by creating a density of green.

John Hill

The bunch of columns is visible from a elevated walkway near the open end of the strategy.

John Hill

Another view of the bunch of green columns — appearing from the opposite direction in the preceding photo — shows a Pac-Man-shape pool beneath. Note the numerous seats that are observed in this portion of the park.

John Hill

With the success of the climbing plants on the construction (thanks to irrigation as well as layout, it needs to be mentioned), the multipurpose structures on both sides feel burnt; they become spaces characterized by the green “walls” The overhead plane on the right is not another walkway; it’s the raised trench mentioned earlier.

John Hill

Here is a close-up of among those soil-filled elevated trenches, which includes a gangway for maintenance accessibility on the best.

John Hill

The density of the green walls is evident in this view of the closed-off end of the park. I really like the play of shadows out of the roofing on the crops.

John Hill

This last view of the park is in the patio that in fact projects over the roof. This patio includes custom seats shaped for lounging and sunning. From here we can see the very top of the columns as well as the wires that will be someday be covered in green.

More:
11 Inspiring Vertical Gardens
Landscape Suggestions From New York’s High Line

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Fantastic Design Plant: Coast Live Oak

This really is the most familiar and cherished California oak — the shrub that cities and high schools are named for. A large live oak is a shrub to treasure, protect and build a landscape around; it’ll dictate the microclimate of your garden, overseeing birds, moths and squirrels as well as what develops under. If you have the space, you can plant your own nursery-grown live oak. It will grow quicker than you think and most likely outlive you — live oaks in the wild live several hundred decades or longer.

Be conscious of possible bamboo maladies. Trees often succumb to soil diseases brought on by summertime watering. And, regrettably, a constant pathogen called sudden oak death is striking live oaks and dispersing throughout the state. Native oaks are so well loved and worthy of protection there are associations, like the California Oak Foundation, devoted to rescue them.

Las Pilitas Nursery

Botanical name: Quercus agrifolia
Common title: Coast live oak
USDA zones: 9 to 11 (find your zone)
Water necessity: Light; present trees usually suffer if watered in summer.
Light requirement: Full sun
Mature size: Potentially huge with time — around 70 feet tall with an equal spread
Weaknesses and tolerances: Susceptible to oak root fungus; avoid summertime watering. Subject to defoliation by pine moths. Most serious is sudden oak death, a pathogen that has been killing tens of thousands (or millions) of Northern California’s coast live oaks and relevant species for the previous two decades.

Distinguishing traits. About hilltops and valley floors, its dense canopy of foliage and thick trunk make an unmistakable picture of this disappearing agrarian and crazy California.

The evergreen leaves are oval, rigid and spiny. Notice here in this patch of suburban open space that grass does not grow under the tree, and that dropped leaves create a organic mulch — an attractive and healthy position to emulate in a garden setting.

Blasen Landscape Architecture

The best way to utilize it. A live oak is a shade maker, a shrub to build a fort in, to climb in, to hang a swing from. Younger trees, as in this layout by Blasen Landscape Architecture, look perfectly at home in wilder or casual sections of a garden.

Envision Landscape Studio

Because of their size and untidiness (falling leaves, catkins, acorns), live oaks are best at the edge of property, in a somewhat natural section. Do not plant lawn or ground covers beneath present trees that are old; this promotes root diseases. It is also better not even to pave the soil surface. Trees which you plant generally withstand lawn watering better; attempt to avoid summer watering. Mulch, gravel or stones undeneath, as shown here, is healthier and appears more natural.

Sutton Suzuki Architects

Live oak thrives and looks best with other California natives and Mediterranean plants, such as manzanita, ceanothus, lavender and rosemary. Pruning out whole branches can restrain the size somewhat, open up a opinion and neaten up the tree’s form.

Botaniscapes by Tracey

Planting notes. Young trees grow amazingly fast. You can start with nursery plants, available in containers from gallon dimensions to boxes 10 feet square. Pick single-trunk or multiple-trunk shapes. To make a naturalistic grove, plant several trees. Find live oak away from a lawn or other place which gets heavy summertime watering, and plant it in sunlight.

Make sure the drainage is good. Generally there’s no need to amend the planting soil. You’ll need to water the tree frequently, even in the summertime, for its first couple of decades. Provide a sturdy stake. If you live about wildlife, protect young tree trunks from rabbits, deer and other critters.

The main pest is the pine moth caterpillar, which can shred a tree every now and then. If you visit caterpillars falling out of the tree or descending on silk webs, or if you see signs of defoliation, call a professional tree service. Spraying for walnut moths is a major job.

The most fearsome threat to native oaks is sudden oak death, a pathogen that has been murdering Northern California’s coast live oaks and relevant species. (Not all native oaks are vulnerable.) The pathogen’s spores spread during the rainy season, and leaves of affected trees wilt and die; sap exudes from the trunk and branches. If you notice signs of disorder, call a professional arborist.

Las Pilitas Nursery

The best way to develop an oak from an acorn. It is not tough to start an oak tree from an acorn right in the ground. Your enemies will be the typical suspects: birds and squirrels. In fall or winter, start with a wholesome (no insect holes) dropped acorn.

In a sunny place, dig a planting hole 6 inches deep and 6 inches wide. Refill the hole with the excavated soil and bury the acorn sideways a inch deep. The acorn should sprout through spring. Water the soil and help keep it moist throughout the first summer at least.

To boost your chances of succeeding, plant at least several acorns a foot or two apart. Thin the survivors to leave just two or one. Produce a display of wire mesh to protect the sprouting seedlings from famished monsters.

More manuals to California landscaping

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Cheery Massachusetts Beach Getaway

This home in Marblehead, Massachusetts, is the first house on the sea side throughout the causeway from the town’s beautiful Marblehead Neck neighborhood. “It’s a house everyone understands,” says designer Dee Elms.

Her Boston-based clients desired a summer and weekend home that would completely embrace its waterfront location. Elms and her staff at Terrat Elms Interior Design worked with them in their remodel, making an ocean-inspired, low-maintenance house full of natural light and happy doses of colour.

at a Glance
Location: Marblehead, Massachusetts
Who lives here: A busy Boston household during weekends and holidays
Size: 5,300 square feet; four bedrooms

Terrat Elms Interior Design

Windows facing the water line the rear of the home. The eyebrow window near the peak of the great room adds additional all-natural light. “That made such a massive difference to the interior and exterior,” says Elms.

TV console: Hudson; window seat fabric: Dalston, Cowtan & Tout

Terrat Elms Interior Design

Elms relied on the Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams showroom for plush upholstery and also chose Sunbrella fabrics to keep the furniture comfortable and easy to keep. Backgrounds and accent fabrics came mostly from China Seas. “The scale and colours just went flawlessly with the house,” says Elms.

Rug: Faber’s Rug Co.; java table: Brickmaker’s table, Hudson; white sofas, rattan chairs, glass table lamps, linen chair, dining table: Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams

Terrat Elms Interior Design

Grass fabric wallcovering and wide moldings from the entryway set the tone for a warm, coastal-inspired house. The home was owned by three families, each of whom left developments. “The improvements actually didn’t speak to each other,” says Elms. “Our job was to take what we had and set a cohesiveness that was missing.”

Background: China Seas

Terrat Elms Interior Design

Among those clients loves red and can’t get enough of it. “Whenever we had a meeting, she’d even be wearing red,” says Elms. “We chose to use the colour in particular spots around the house.” The kitchen was a great area. Overscale gingham-style fabric covers upholstered benches in a connected casual dining area.

Bench fabric: Sun Check, Ralph Lauren; barstools: Brewster Barstools, Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams; dining table: Big Sur Dining Table, Crate & Barrel; chairs: Kiki slipcovered chair, Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams

Terrat Elms Interior Design

The front part of the house does not let in as much light as the back and can feel really exposed to the road. Elms had plantation shutters installed all the front windows for solitude and left the rear windows uncovered.

Terrat Elms Interior Design

The kitchen design was created with plenty of counter space for food prep, serving and eating. Calacatta marble counters sit at a low height for convenient baking and cooking. The large bar counter is constructed of Caesarstone. Custom made cabinetry and neutral backsplash tile work nicely with the vivid walls.

High counter: Lagos Blue, Caesarstone; Elson; cabinetry: Brookhaven; backsplash: Hudson Brazil Nut, Stone Source; wall colour: Poppy, Benjamin Moore

Terrat Elms Interior Design

A cheerful green Chippendale chair from Hudson accents a built-in desk region and message centre beside the fridge.

Terrat Elms Interior Design

An indoor/outdoor cabana room toward the rear of the house has a massive slider that opens up to the backyard. Elms Lay the walls with white fabric for a tropical feel.

White couch, black side table: Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams; pink and taupe chairs: Clementine, Verellen; trunk: classic

Terrat Elms Interior Design

A deep red bedroom reflects the customer’s love of the colour. A traditional white bedspread with subtle traces of blue in a decorative pillow retains the palette from going overboard.

Terrat Elms Interior Design

“When we didn’t use red, we used derivatives of it such as pink, which she also loved,” says Elms. Pink China Seas background in the master bath gives the space a light, feminine feel.

Terrat Elms Interior Design

A wine storage and tasting area filled with custom walnut wine racks is nestled to the bottom floor. A Caesarstone pub and luxury barstool offers the ideal spot to enjoy a glass out of a favorite bottle.

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Kitchen Counters: Permanent Soapstone

Chemistry class might’ve been your first experience with soapstone, where it had been the countertop substance of choice owing to its chemically inert composition (meaning chemicals won’t mar it) and high density, making it impervious to stains and bacteria. In case soapstone can hold up to high school pupils and Bunsen burners, it might be the right choice for your kitchen or toilet.

Have a look at those soapstone counters and find out more about this exceptional stone to find out whether it may work in your property.

Buckminster Green LLC

The fundamentals: Soapstone is a natural stone composed chiefly of mineral talc, which gives the material the smooth texture of soap. Slab colours are typically medium gray and may have a greenish cast. Over time, the soapstone will darken to a deep charcoal. Slabs may contain.

Cost: $80 to $100 per square foot, installed

Frank Valdes

Experts: Durability is soapstone’s top bragging right. It is not unusual in the northeast portions of the U.S. to discover soapstone sinks and wood-burning stoves from the 1800s that are still functioning today, so think about this countertop a lifetime investment. Soapstone is a great material for your own kitchen, as it’s untouched by heat (proven by its historic usage for stoves). Being neutral means that acids like tomatoes and lemon juice will not damage it, and its density makes it impenetrable by everything, such as bacteria and would-be stains.

Disadvantages: its own talc material makes soapstone softer than another stone counters, which leads to corners and edges being eased over time. Nicks and scratches may accumulate too, which is sanded out or regarded as a part of its dwelling patina. When choosing your slab, it’s fantastic to know that the greener the slab, the softer it is. So find coils using less of a green cast if you would like a harder slab.

International Granite & Marble

Special considerations: Make sure your soapstone is architectural level, which is denser than the artistic grade frequently used for sculpture.

SchappacherWhite Architecture D.P.C.

Maintenance: Mild soap and water will look after routine cleanup. Regular application of food-grade mineral oil is generally advocated, as it darkens the stone and leaves the look more persistent, but know that applying the petroleum is only for aesthetics.

Artisan Kitchens Inc..

Sustainability: Soapstone becomes green kudos for being a substance that will last for generations.

But, the mining of soapstone is harmful. Although soapstone was mined domestically in Vermont and Appalachia, most counter material is currently mined in Brazil, resulting in significant transportation-related energy expenditure.

More guides to choosing kitchen counters

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Kitchen of the Week: Tiny, Fruitful New York Kitchen

Although she’s been desperate enough to wash dishes in her bathtub, Yossy Arefi-Afshar can find plenty of things to appreciate about her tiny rental kitchen in New York. A lack of storage and prep space surely makes things difficult, but it also forces her to get creative with decor and cooking.

Whether it is turning a drawer to extra prep space, utilizing every square inch of vertical storage or changing up the darling artwork on her kitchen wall, Arefi-Afshar embraces her little kitchen and utilizes it to whip up tasty seasonal desserts and keeps for her website, Apt. 2B Baking Co..

Apt 2B Baking Co..

Q. What’s your go-to dish for a dinner party?

A. I like to keep it simple for dinner celebrations. I’ll never forget the time I got too rough with my menu and ended up doing dishes in the bathtub the following moment. It was a great celebration, but I believe I used every single bowl, pot, pan and utensil I possessed.

Lately, I have been really into cooking up a big pot of mussels with garlic, wine and a lot of parsley, with a side of whatever veggies are in season — peas and fava beans sauteed with shallots are a favorite — and some sliced sourdough bread to consume all of the delicious juices from the mussels. For dessert I adore rustic fruit tarts, pies or crumbles with ice cream.

Apt 2B Baking Co..

Q. What are the three kitchen necessities you use most?

A. My sturdy kitchen scale, that has lived quite a few falls; parchment paper for all manner of cooking tasks; and my bench and bowl scrapers. They’re a baker buddies.

Apt 2B Baking Co..

Q. How have you heard to earn cooking in a little kitchen easier?

A. Just like a lot of people with little kitchens, ” I wish I had more counter space. When I’m working on a large project at home, like a wedding cake, I totally clear the decks and temporarily relocate everything to another portion of the apartment.

Subsequently to give myself a bit more surface area, I’ll pull out a jar or two and put a sheet pan in addition to make a few more inches of counter space.

Hint: sterile as you go, instead of leaving all of the dishes until the end. “Small kitchens get cluttered fast,” states Arefi-Afshar. “Particularly when your sink is about 12 inches square.”

Apt 2B Baking Co..

Q. What are three kitchen luxuries you really adore?

A. Delicious-smelling dishwashing soap for all of my hand-washed dishes — Mrs. Meyer’s Basil Scent is my very favourite — my Le Creuset and All-Clad cookware I hope will last a lifetime, and my Ateco cake turntable. It’s heavy and hard to store, but it makes cake decorating so simple.

Apt 2B Baking Co..

Q. Tell us something else you love about your kitchen.

A. My little rotating collection of artwork on the walls. I like to shoot photos and cards and stick them up using washi tape. It’s a simple, inexpensive means to add a little colour to the room and very simple to switch up when I get tired of what is hanging. Right now I have a few of my own photos hanging together with a letterpress baseball card Ray Pepper, created by Left Field Cards — a card from BDRStudio, another card created by my pal Ellie and a great fruit and veggie print from the Little Canoe shop on Etsy.

Apt 2B Baking Co..

Q. What’s a good storage or space-saving secret?

A. I try to use my little distance very efficiently, and that means a lot of stacking and lots of bowls, pans and serving dishes. I also try my best to use wall and vertical area. I store some of my sheet pans in the distance between the top of my cabinets and the ceiling, and my dish rack resides on top of the refrigerator. Knives are stored on a magnetic strip on the wall above the stove, and pots and pans go on hooks outside of the kitchen.

Hint: If you have an extra-small kitchen, a shopping habit could cause some storage issues. Before you purchase something, constantly ask yourself in which you are going to store it. If you can’t answer that, it might want to remain in the store.

Apt 2B Baking Co..

Arefi-Afshar is originally from Seattle. She began Apt. 2B Baking Co. throughout her stint working in restaurant kitchens and proceeds to chronicle her cooking and baking adventures now.

Portrait: Ellie Connell
Pictures of kitchen: Yossy Arefi-Afshar

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Put the Kibosh Dryer Chaos

Even if my toilet weren’t the size of a postage stamp, I would still have hair drier issues. Somehow, it always appears to be in the manner: cable snaking across the vanity top, sexy nozzle burning my leg as I lean in the mirror, the entire thing crashing into the ground when I nudge it with a elbow.

As with so many problems, the response comes down to “a place for everything and everything in its place” My dryer is supposed to remain in a basket on the counter when it’s not being used, but clearly that strategy isn’t working. If you are confronted with the same frustration, then try one of these storage suggestions to keep things easy and compact.

Dura Supreme Cabinetry

Multitasking at its best: Custom slots in this pullout cupboard are sized to maintain not just the hair drier, but in addition a curling iron and a brush.

This drawer takes the same notion one step farther. Not only do electric styling tools have their own pockets, but brushes, sprays and gels as well as other pampering paraphernalia go in slots that are designated as well.

S&W Kitchens

Who understood the solution might be as simple as a hook on the back of a cupboard? Electrical sockets within mean you can leave the drier and other grooming appliances plugged in if you would like. As with any electric appliance, you’d just have to be careful to keep water away from the plugs.

Angela Todd Designs, Portland, OR

Or, rather than conventional cabinet doors, go to get a garage-style cubby like this one. The lift-up mechanism ensures the door remains out of the way.

Laura Britt Design

A profound shelf in this pullout corrals styling tools and their strings without allowing them to slip and slide into the ground.

Geneva Cabinet Company, LLC

How come I’ve never thought of this? A very simple rack mounted within a cabinet door, just like the ones designed to maintain dish soap or additional paper towels, generates a ready-made spot for the drier when you are finished with it.

Metric Design Centre

This nifty little gadget is a cheap solution to the hair drier hassle. Just plop it on your counter and stick the hair drier in to keep it out of the way.

Jerry Jacobs Design, Inc..

Of course, you could opt for the ultimate in convenience: a wall-mounted dryer model that minds its own business when you are finished with it. Problem sidestepped!

More:
Idea of the Week: Vanity Having a Salon Touch

Obtaining Girly: The Dressing Table

Toilet Trends: Open Vanity Storage

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Glulam

Glulam is the nickname for timber. Thin sheets of wood are pressure bonded with waterproof adhesives, resulting in a wood material that’s stronger than traditional woodcan cover longer spans, since it’s stress engineered and not sawn wood. Glulam can also be moisture resistant and can be a flame retardant.

Doerr Architecture

Glulam can be produced in curved shapes, in lengths exceeding 100 feet.

bright designlab

Glulam is manufactured after the same formulation as plywood sheets of wood glued together.

Chris Johnson

Glulam timbers are stronger and less expensive than steel beams or sawn wood, which makes them a fantastic selection for open areas with long spans.

Not only for use, glulam has flexibility.

Browse more glulam photographs

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A Vancouver Condo Organizing a Modern Note

Small space apart, Richard Liang knew his Vancouver condominium was exactly where he wished to live. Even though the 650-square-foot living space was a little intimidating, he was able to match all his furniture by creating a drawing of the room to scale and experimenting with countless furniture structures before going in. “The biggest design challenge for me personally was accommodating the limited quantity of space without sacrificing aesthetics or usefulness,” says Liang, a mechanical engineer. The result is a comfortable and masculine bachelor pad, with accessories that show Liang’s life pursuits along with a gorgeous city view.

at a Glance
Who lives here: Richard Liang
Location: Mount Pleasant area of Vancouver, B.C., Canada
Size: 650 square feet; 1 bedroom
That is intriguing: Liang is a gifted guitarist and has played live acts across the South of France.

Heather Merenda

Music has a significant effect in Liang’s interior design and artwork — you will find tributes to his fire in every area. The piece above the dining table is among the earliest forms of composed music on sheepskin. “I’ve been told it’s a dirty hymn, however I can’t read Latin, so that I may never know,” Liang says.

What seems like a framed polka dot print in the space was produced by Liang’s buddy Natalia Grosner. The smart illustration depicts their buddies are connected.

Heather Merenda

Liang commissioned artist David Ko to make this oil and acrylic canvas for the living room. In addition to paintings, Ko also does T-shirt illustrations, album artwork, package design and skateboard graphics.

Heather Merenda

The dining area light merges a conventional shade and a wire cage into an industrial-inspired but elegant pendant. Paired with a classic table, it gives the room a postmodern feel. “I’ve always been fascinated with depictions of the future that are unmistakably in yesteryear,” Liang says.

Pendant lamp: Bluff City, Jonah Takagi for Roll & Hill

Heather Merenda

The inside color schemes were made by Portico Design Group. Liang opted for a contemporary look with polished Caesarstone slab countertops, sleek stainless steel appliances and walnut cabinets.

Heather Merenda

The ice cream silkscreen by Natalia Grosner is a welcome addition to the kitchen. The design was motivated by rap legends about food.

Heather Merenda

This antique table features a crank system that makes it ideal for entertaining. When flipped, the fold enables the table to be raised to pub height or reduced for dining. Visible rivets adorn the iron trim, adding to the industrial styling of this dining area.

Dining table: Antiques Direct Worldwide

Heather Merenda

The framed Joan Miró lithographs propped atop this rustic bookshelf have been a present from Liang’s mother. The classic bits are Liang’s treasured artwork in the house. “I’m a spontaneous shopper and buy on instinct. When I like something, I usually know right away and take care of it. The decorating comes afterwards,” he says.

Heather Merenda

The south-facing living area boasts expansive views of the city. The living room’s guitar installation is a smart combination of storage and artwork.

Sofa: Niels Bendtsen for Bensen; rug: from Hong Kong

Heather Merenda

Liang was playing music since he was 6 or 7. The acoustic guitar on the wall with the D-shape sound hole is a style of guitar frequently associated with gypsy jazz. The guitar has deep sentimental value.

Heather Merenda

When the canvas color on this floor lamp is illuminated, the patchwork, stitching and texture shine through. Together with the classic leather seat, these particulars include a tailored, masculine edge to the room.

Floor lamp: Diesel’s Successful Living collaboration with Foscarini

Heather Merenda

Low-maintenance succulent varieties from neighborhood shop Balconi Floral Design Studio sit on top of a living room console.

Heather Merenda

Liang’s bedroom is a work in progress — he is currently on the lookout for a new bed frame. A painted portrait by Ben Tour hangs over the headboard, and a ceiling lighting made by Ramón Benedito to get Vibia illuminates the space.

Heather Merenda

Liang’s home office desk has a excellent cord management system: Walnut wood panels front and back make it simple to keep wires and cords from view. A discreet multifunctional front drawer allows the computer keyboard to be stowed away to get a minimum look. The side of this desk is at a satin aluminum finish. Liang hopes to find a fashionable new office chair to increase the space.

Framed artwork: Bahaus Museum; painting: secondhand; desk: Inspiration Furniture; ceiling lighting: Egoluce

Heather Merenda

Liang put outdoor furniture and a barbecue on the balcony to include livable square footage. With fantastic views of the town, this is a choice place to hang out with buddies night or day.

Heather Merenda

It is hard to beat the view from Liang’s balcony. When he hosts larger events at his condominium there is rooftop access, complete with a barbecue and a fireplace. The scenic views are worth a trip up to the very best. Liang says, “I believe the place has changed radically in the past couple of years, and I find it exciting. Although Vancouver is not that large a town, I still feel I can get lost”

telephone: have you got an eclectic, imaginative residence? We’d really like to see it.

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