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How to Transform Your Kitchen Without Renovating

This Affordable Kitchen Transformation Is Filled With DIYs

How to Transform Your Kitchen Without Renovating

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We know it's not always possible to renovate your kitchen when you're on a budget and working with a small space. This awesome before-and-after story from One Kings Lane shows how to totally transform your kitchen without renovating it.

With a meager budget and a ton of imaginative ideas, stylist Megan Pflug gave our editor Kerstin Czarra a new kitchen (sans hard hat). Check out Kerstin's account of the process and incredible before-and-after.

During a conversation in February, Megan casually said, "It would be fun to do an easy but stylish before-and-after." Before I realized it, I said, "You can try my kitchen if you really want a challenge." Half-joking really. But Megan was already grabbing her measuring tape and camera and inquiring when she could drop by to "assess" the situation.

The situation, like many a New York City kitchen, was quite grim. The space was tiny (3 feet by 6 feet) and dark (no windows), with about 2 square feet of counter space (seriously) and the usual rental materials (dingy linoleum, cheap cabinetry, and neglected walls that had been painted over at least 10 times). It was topped (literally) with an 1980s recessed light that made the space even more unappetizing.

The first step in the process? "Find me a picture of a kitchen you love," said Megan. That was easy; I had come across an image of a kitchen dreamed up by a Danish design firm that I loved because it struck the perfect balance between classic and decidedly cool.

Then Megan had me break down the elements that spoke to me:

The color. I like how painting everything that grayish blue looked so sophisticated and bespoke.

The glass-front cabinets. They remind me of something you'd see in an old library.

The floors. Herringbone is a subtle hit of pattern and different from the usual dark wood planks so popular right now.

The light fixture. It's the surprise in the room, like some glam version of Tinker Toys.

Megan assured me we could get the look easily with a few clever reinterpretations of the list above. Even better, she said it would involve no demolition, permits, or having to stay elsewhere while my kitchen was in ruins. "You might look at a less-than-beautiful kitchen and think ripping out cabinets or tearing up floors is the only solution," says Megan. "But I wanted to show how truly transforming a total wash of paint color can be. It has the power to unify disparate finishes and forgives any imperfections."

Here's the step-by-step evolution of my hovel of a kitchen into a dead ringer for the Danish beauty.

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