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soffit over corner cabinet?
Hi all:
I am designing a new kitchen in a room with 10' ceilings. I plan to run the cabinets up to 8' and then have 2' of soffit (12" deep) around the perimeter of the kitchen. In the one corner where there would be cabinets, however, I had planned on having one of those specialized wall corner cabinets that runs at a 45 degree angle in the middle rather than an "L" shaped cabinet. The only thing is that if I choose such a cabinet the part that runs at the 45 degree angle would extend beyond the bottom of the soffit. Since the room is a blank slate right now, I've got a lot of options, but I don't know which would be best. As I see it, the main options would be: 1) make the soffit run at a diagonal over that corner (and probably other corners as well, just so it matches) 2) just go with an "L" shaped cabinet 3) make the soffit deeper than the cabinets. Any input? This is just one of those things that I never thought to look at in houses I've been at. Thanks in advance for any help. |
soffit over corner cabinet?
"none" wrote in message oups.com... Hi all: I am designing a new kitchen in a room with 10' ceilings. I plan to run the cabinets up to 8' and then have 2' of soffit (12" deep) around the perimeter of the kitchen. In the one corner where there would be cabinets, however, I had planned on having one of those specialized wall corner cabinets that runs at a 45 degree angle in the middle rather than an "L" shaped cabinet. The only thing is that if I choose such a cabinet the part that runs at the 45 degree angle would extend beyond the bottom of the soffit. Since the room is a blank slate right now, I've got a lot of options, but I don't know which would be best. As I see it, the main options would be: 1) make the soffit run at a diagonal over that corner (and probably other corners as well, just so it matches) 2) just go with an "L" shaped cabinet 3) make the soffit deeper than the cabinets. Any input? This is just one of those things that I never thought to look at in houses I've been at. Thanks in advance for any help. Personally I would forget about the soffit and install lights on top of the cabinets instead. I did that for a few customers and it looks good and makes a good night light. |
soffit over corner cabinet?
"John Grabowski" wrote:
Personally I would forget about the soffit and install lights on top of the cabinets instead. I did that for a few customers and it looks good and makes a good night light. Rope lighting on the top and zenon puck licks underneath, both on a dimmer will make any kitchen look amazing... -- "Tell me what I should do, Annie." "Stay. Here. Forever." - Life On Mars |
soffit over corner cabinet?
"Rick Blaine" wrote in message ... "John Grabowski" wrote: Personally I would forget about the soffit and install lights on top of the cabinets instead. I did that for a few customers and it looks good and makes a good night light. Rope lighting on the top and zenon puck licks underneath, both on a dimmer will make any kitchen look amazing... Agreed that open above makes the kitchen look bigger. And a sofitt taller than it is wide will look wrong to most people. But keep in mind you now have a horizontal surface 7+ feet above ground. People WILL try to use it for storage, and women, who tend to be shorter, will shy away because they are the ones that usually get stuck doing the dusting. I'd also look at maybe an 18x18 floating soffit, with indirect lighting in the top of that. If the top surface is over 8 feet, people won't try to store stuff on it. Taller upper cabinets with an extra shelf might be indicated. Hard to say without seeing the space, the windows, and how it flows into the rest of the house. This is an expensive remodel- maybe a consult with an actual designer would be worthwhile (one that isn't paid on commission for pushing what their employer sells.) aem sends.... |
soffit over corner cabinet?
On Aug 11, 8:06 pm, "aemeijers" wrote:
"Rick Blaine" wrote in message ... "John Grabowski" wrote: Personally I would forget about the soffit and install lights on top of the cabinets instead. I did that for a few customers and it looks good and makes a good night light. Rope lighting on the top and zenon puck licks underneath, both on a dimmer will make any kitchen look amazing... Agreed that open above makes the kitchen look bigger. And a sofitt taller than it is wide will look wrong to most people. But keep in mind you now have a horizontal surface 7+ feet above ground. People WILL try to use it for storage, and women, who tend to be shorter, will shy away because they are the ones that usually get stuck doing the dusting. I'd also look at maybe an 18x18 floating soffit, with indirect lighting in the top of that. If the top surface is over 8 feet, people won't try to store stuff on it. Taller upper cabinets with an extra shelf might be indicated. Hard to say without seeing the space, the windows, and how it flows into the rest of the house. This is an expensive remodel- maybe a consult with an actual designer would be worthwhile (one that isn't paid on commission for pushing what their employer sells.) aem sends.... You need to shop at Home Depot! ---------------------------------- www.tawny-kitaen.com |
soffit over corner cabinet?
Thanks for everyone's input so far. Yes, I guess not having a soffit
at all is one of the options as well. I've been told by both numerous people though that in the kitchen that is being designed, a soffit goes best because of the height of the kitchen in comparison to its length. There is also a strong presumption against the whole "dust collector" aspect of leaving it open above the tall cabinets. I suppose shrinking the soffit to only a foot high would solve your "soffit taller than it is thick" problem, but the original question would still stand. So putting aside the whole soffit vs. no soffit debate, if I did go with a soffit, how would you handle the corners in order to accomodate the corner cabinets? Thanks "Rick Blaine" wrote in message .. . "John Grabowski" wrote: Personally I would forget about the soffit and install lights on top of the cabinets instead. I did that for a few customers and it looks good and makes a good night light. Rope lighting on the top and zenon puck licks underneath, both on a dimmer will make any kitchen look amazing... Agreed that open above makes the kitchen look bigger. And a sofitt taller than it is wide will look wrong to most people. But keep in mind you now have a horizontal surface 7+ feet above ground. People WILL try to use it for storage, and women, who tend to be shorter, will shy away because they are the ones that usually get stuck doing the dusting. I'd also look at maybe an 18x18 floating soffit, with indirect lighting in the top of that. If the top surface is over 8 feet, people won't try to store stuff on it. Taller upper cabinets with an extra shelf might be indicated. Hard to say without seeing the space, the windows, and how it flows into the rest of the house. This is an expensive remodel- maybe a consult with an actual designer would be worthwhile (one that isn't paid on commission for pushing what their employer sells.) aem sends.... You need to shop at Home Depot! ----------------------------------www.tawny-kitaen.com- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
soffit over corner cabinet?
"none" wrote in message ps.com... Thanks for everyone's input so far. Yes, I guess not having a soffit at all is one of the options as well. I've been told by both numerous people though that in the kitchen that is being designed, a soffit goes best because of the height of the kitchen in comparison to its length. There is also a strong presumption against the whole "dust collector" aspect of leaving it open above the tall cabinets. I suppose shrinking the soffit to only a foot high would solve your "soffit taller than it is thick" problem, but the original question would still stand. So putting aside the whole soffit vs. no soffit debate, if I did go with a soffit, how would you handle the corners in order to accomodate the corner cabinets? Angle the corners, like you said, or maybe even (if you are ambitious) radius them. Or make the soffit wide enough that the problem goes away, leaving at least 3" of exposed soffit in front of the corners. Some people avoid the problem by using taller upper cabinets (in this case, tall enough to reach 8 feet), and just dropping the whole ceiling above the cabinets, with a wall-color bulkhead facing the remainder of the open space. You can lay banks of cheap lights in the dead space, for an extremely well lit kitchen. Advantage of a drop ceiling or large bulkhead, is that it makes routing the exhaust fans and any wiring for accent lights extremely easy. Not that lighting counter surfaces from a 10 foot ceiling will be challenging, another plus for a wide soffit or drop ceiling. With a tight soffit or no soffit, you are almost stuck with lots of little spots with hard to change bulbs, or some sort of hanging fixture plus under-cabinet lights. The more I think about this, with sleep-deprived befuddled 0430 mind, the cooler a drop ceiling with a light well and skylight at the ten-foot real ceiling sounds. aem sends... |
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