Inspired by sparking city lights in the background, the design of elegant and well lit quartersawn Anigre veneer bookcases and credenza and Wenge veneer television/lift housing appears in harmony with spacious loft floor plan. An office storage cabinet with sliding quartersawn white oak wood and acrylic shoji doors keep files, equipment, binders and supplies out of sight.
The brilliantly tailored stained cherry cabinetry was an inspirational interpretation from the arts and crafts movement. Fashioned and assembled on site by modern day crafts people taking into consideration contemporary demands and incorporating modern appliances and fixtures.
Gorgeous mountain and urban views fill the spacious picture windows of this downtown Portland loft home. The homeowners relax and enjoy the Willamette river view while sitting at a floating custom glass bar surface held up by a custom-designed stainless steel support structure. Dark Mahogany woodwork anchors the ambiance of this high rise haven, and a zebra wood desk and credenza provides a flair of frivolity. A bar cabinet utilizes sliding architectural glass doors with accent lighting behind.
The charming eating nook to the side of this hard working, hardwood kitchen overlooks hillside pastures dotted with livestock. Every spaceof the house had custom fitted cabinetry installed including the spacious kitchen, laundry room, guest bathroom, powder room, a master bath and closet area, home office and drafting studio and a media room with built-in audio-video components. The lines of the woodwork were fairly plain and unadorned, allowing the undulating grain patterns of the stained quarter cut Cherry and White Oak hardwood speak volumes.
Bamboo and maple used for the cabinetry for this quiet mid century Yamhill county abode. A medley of stone, tile, glass, wood, bio-composite panels, acrylic shoji screen paper, aluminum and decorative metal hardware were utilized to provide accents and supportive textures to the finely-detailed casework and paneling.
Brilliantly stained cabinetry and woodwork, as well as many locally handmade glass, steel, stone, tile and wood elements deftly were fused to create a daring composition in a remodeled loft in a Portland Pearl District condo building that was initially built in the 1900’s as Portland’s first confectionery production plant. Panelized and built-in appliances, specialized stone and tile installation and a serpentine overhead lighting system serve to provide endless examples of customization and organization.