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Remodeling the Perlow Kitchen


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231 replies to this topic

#211 Suvir Saran

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Posted 16 November 2002 - 01:23 AM

DO we see some photographs?? :wink: :rolleyes:

#212 Rachel Perlow

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Posted 16 November 2002 - 06:42 AM

The punch list is the final checklist of stuff you need them to do before you will get off their backs. It is commonly used term in new home construction and remodeling.

Regarding pictures, I am waiting for everything to be completed so I can unveil the kitchen in one fell swoop. :raz:

#213 mikec

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Posted 06 January 2003 - 08:46 AM

You have to be done by now...inquiring minds want pictures...

Does Jose get stuck to the versabond tile cement?
Does the Lutron sink meet code?
Will Pete by slobbered to death by two vicious dogs?

Tune in for an update! :biggrin:

#214 slarochelle

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Posted 21 May 2003 - 11:09 AM

Just to bring this thread back up in the list......I'm sure many people would like to see the finished result and hear any final comments you have now that the construction has been completed for a few months.

#215 Jason Perlow

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Posted 21 May 2003 - 12:34 PM

Just to bring this thread back up in the list......I'm sure many people would like to see the finished result and hear any final comments you have now that the construction has been completed for a few months.

I'll take some pictures of the kitchen tomorrow after the cleaning ladies are done with it. The kitchen has a tendency to get messy (piled up dishes, etc) and we aren't exactly the most anal-retentively-spick-and-span couple, if you know what I mean.
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#216 Suzanne F

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Posted 21 May 2003 - 06:34 PM

But, Jason, SOMEONE has to be normal (= "we aren't exactly the most anal-retentively-spick-and-span couple"). Sorry to push it onto you and Rachel, whom I like a lot. :smile:

#217 Jason Perlow

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Posted 22 May 2003 - 04:05 PM

Here they are, as promised:

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#218 MatthewB

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Posted 22 May 2003 - 04:08 PM

Very nice. Congrats Jason & Rachel!

And thanks for finally posting the final pics.

#219 slarochelle

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Posted 23 May 2003 - 07:42 AM

Very cool looking. That first picture looks like it could be in a brochure. Thanks for posting them.
Steve

#220 pixelchef

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Posted 23 May 2003 - 07:44 AM

Jason, you've taken over the position of my personal eGullet Jesus (previously held by .. well no one, I just made it up right now, but it's prestigious; I promise.)

Awesome kitchen.

#221 Sandra Levine

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Posted 23 May 2003 - 07:50 AM

Very nice...as it should be, for all the aggravation.

#222 tommy

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Posted 23 May 2003 - 07:52 AM

wow. that looks really nice. what are the things behind the stove top? those faucet looking thingies. :unsure:

#223 davidthomas8779

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Posted 23 May 2003 - 08:28 AM

wow.  that looks really nice.  what are the things behind the stove top?  those faucet looking thingies.  :unsure:

They are faucets for filling pots so that you don't have to struggle back and forth between sink and stove.

#224 tommy

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Posted 24 May 2003 - 11:27 AM

wow.  that looks really nice.  what are the things behind the stove top?  those faucet looking thingies.  :unsure:

They are faucets for filling pots so that you don't have to struggle back and forth between sink and stove.

i've never seen it in a kitchen in someone's home. nice.

#225 Priscilla

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Posted 24 May 2003 - 11:56 AM

Really really nice -- I like the color palette very much.

But I have a BIG complaint -- THERE ARE NO DOGS IN THESE PHOTOS!!!

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#226 Rachel Perlow

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Posted 28 May 2003 - 08:48 PM

wow.  that looks really nice.  what are the things behind the stove top?  those faucet looking thingies.  :unsure:

They are faucets for filling pots so that you don't have to struggle back and forth between sink and stove.

Could someone please suggest an answer back to my mother about the pot filler? She says, "sure, but don't you still have to get the pot back to the sink to drain the water?" (assuming pasta or blanching veggies, not stock)

I say I usually use a pasta scoop for the pasta and wait for the water to cool before bringing it back to the sink, and it is lighter because pasta absorbs some of the water. I'm glad we got the pot filler, but that bit of nit picking aggrevates me and I want a better come back.

Also, ACK! Someday when I actually get organized (ha ha) I'll take more pics and include the poodles.

Edit: Another thing, the hand on the cabinet door(s) to the left of the stove bangs into the wall slightly, suggestions for covering up current dent (about a 1/4" mark) and preventing future ones?

PS - we did get some $ back from EXPO for all the hassles. :raz:

Edited by Rachel Perlow, 28 May 2003 - 08:52 PM.


#227 Rachel Perlow

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Posted 28 May 2003 - 08:56 PM

More info on the pics, they are cinematic lithos by Guy Buffet. Here are links with better images:

Sushi Chef

Les Chickens

#228 Allie D'Augustine

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Posted 29 May 2003 - 08:47 AM

Could someone please suggest an answer back to my mother about the pot filler? She says, "sure, but don't you still have to get the pot back to the sink to drain the water?" (assuming pasta or blanching veggies, not stock)

I say I usually use a pasta scoop for the pasta and wait for the water to cool before bringing it back to the sink, and it is lighter because pasta absorbs some of the water. I'm glad we got the pot filler, but that bit of nit picking aggrevates me and I want a better come back.


Rachel, I'm a master at comebacks to a nitpicky mother. :) I think you should appeal to her desire for safety.... with half the trips, there's half the chance of an accident... You've slashed that risk in two! (Sure, ok, the hot water trip is obviously the more dangerous one, but don't mention that part.)

#229 FoodMan

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Posted 29 May 2003 - 10:29 AM

Very Very nice kitchen Perlows...Congrats.
I don't mean to be nit picky, but is there enough counter top space for chopping, dough making... especially with two people in there?
Sorry if this was mentioned before but I did not read all the previous pages of this thread :unsure:


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#230 Rachel Perlow

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Posted 29 May 2003 - 10:36 AM

I tend to tidy up before cooking, there is a bit of a clutter shown in those pics. I've used the peninsula for pastry, the counter top is Silestone (aka man-made granite). Anyone need the marble pastry slab I don't need anymore? :biggrin: The Kitchen-Aid is perfectly situated there in the corner. It is the kind where the bowl goes up & down, not the (hmm, what's the right word?) head, so it doesn't have to be moved to be used. We cook together occasionally, but not frequently. When we do, the prep work gets done by the peninsula while someone is at the stove. And there's countertop on both sides of the double sink as well.

#231 snowangel

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Posted 30 May 2003 - 12:56 PM

Could someone please suggest an answer back to my mother about the pot filler? She says, "sure, but don't you still have to get the pot back to the sink to drain the water?" (assuming pasta or blanching veggies, not stock)

I say I usually use a pasta scoop for the pasta and wait for the water to cool before bringing it back to the sink, and it is lighter because pasta absorbs some of the water. I'm glad we got the pot filler, but that bit of nit picking aggrevates me and I want a better come back.


Rachel, I'm a master at comebacks to a nitpicky mother. :) I think you should appeal to her desire for safety.... with half the trips, there's half the chance of an accident... You've slashed that risk in two! (Sure, ok, the hot water trip is obviously the more dangerous one, but don't mention that part.)

Another tactic would be "resale" value. "We were told that this could be a real selling point to an affluent buyer..."

Your kitchen is beautiful. And, I love the fact that you keep the stuff out (small appliances, condiments) that you use most often. When I see pictures in magazines, I always wonder "so what do they do with their stuff? Do they not have any stuff?"
Susan Fahning aka "snowangel"

#232 tanabutler

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Posted 06 August 2003 - 05:38 PM

When we chose our contractor, we certainly did not pick him out of the Yellow Pages.  In fact, he does absolutely no advertising at all.  He has been in business for many years, and he gets all his jobs through word of mouth, that is, satisfied customers -- of which there are many.  The person who gave me his name is someone whose opinion I could trust totally.  She and her husband are extremely fussy, and all the work that was done for them was done to a "T".   Also, we did make financial comparisons with other contractors, and ours was far from the least expensive.  But he was not out of sight either.  You never want to do these kinds of renovations on the cheap.  By making comparisons, we were able to get a good idea of what was realistic.  And his estimate was.  

A good, trustworthy, responsible builder is worth his weight in emeralds. I know, I'm married to one. I've heard so many horror stories of job's he's had to clean up after, and I cannot believe how some people do business. Bob is so meticulous in his work (I wish he were that meticulous at home!) that he's taught me things about being a professional.

He says over and over, "They pay me the money to do the worrying for them." Anticipating how sub-contractors will perform, making his crews understand the importance of pristine work habits (draping furniture, cleaning up everything at the end of a day's work), and so on, is just part of the responsibility. Unfortunately so many builders are slapdash.

Rozrapp, yours is a great post with so many important little details.