| A designer can pull
all the pieces of your kitchen puzzle together. The designer will
keep you from getting bogged down in details that can throw your planning
off track. Youll be free to dream, while the designer thinks
through all the measurements, material coordination, and construction
logistics.
You might want a recycle center, for example, but
you cant quite figure out where it would fit so you decide
to go without it. If you were working with a designer, he might
know exactly how to make the recycle center work based on his experience
with similar kitchens and his specialized training. Or you may have
always wanted a dramatic beamed ceiling but assumed that your house
couldnt support it. A designer could tell you that decorative
beams often can be installed below the ceiling line without requiring
any structural changes.
In other words, a good designer will help you do it
right the first time, see possibilities where you could not, and
make the entire experience go smoothly.
When you work with a kitchen designer, you dont
have to give up control of your plans or turn all the remodeling
work over to other craftsmen. Think of yourself as the movie producer
and of the kitchen designer as the movie director. You can be intimately
involved in every detail of the project and even do some of the
hands-on work. But when you do need someone to handle logistics,
whether its ordering products or coordinating contractors
schedules, the designer can step in.
A designer will typically:
- Visit your home to take measurements.
- Create a design and draft perspectives, elevations,
and a floor plan.
- Develop a detailed budget and schedule.
- Order products and materials.
- Coordinate work with construction, painting, and
other contractors.
- Oversee the installation and placement of the cabinets
and other design elements.
- Before meeting with a designer, consider
- What you and your family like and dislike about
your current kitchen. Bring a rough floor plan of your kitchen
with you.
- What general styles you likecontemporary,
traditional, or eclectic.
- Whether you want your kitchen to reflect the architectural
style of your home.
- What designs have caught your attentionbring
photos or magazine tear-outs of your favorites.
- When you want your new kitchen to be ready.
- How much you want to spend.
- What questions you have about the designers
work & about the remodeling process in general
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