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Ditch The Concrete Pavers: Gravel Started Taking Over Outdoor Spaces

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Concrete pavers remain a common choice for outdoor spaces, but gravel appears throughout many contemporary gardens. Paths, seating areas, water features, and garden rooms use the same material to create a consistent look across the landscape. Curves, irregular layouts, and planting-heavy designs often work in gravel’s favor. These gardens show how the material can shape entire outdoor spaces rather than serving as a path alone. Gravel Paths Wove Between Planting Beds Narrow gravel paths pass between dense borders filled with daylilies and foliage plants. Soft curves allow the planting to remain the dominant feature while the path provides access through the garden. Light-colored gravel creates contrast against the surrounding greenery and helps define the route without introducing large hard surfaces. Seating Areas Extended Into Gravel Gardens Gravel paths connect planting beds with a small paved seating area. Ornamental grasses and flowering perennials soften the transi...

Stainless Steel Is Moving Beyond Appliances and Taking Over Entire Kitchens

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Stainless steel spent decades confined to refrigerators, dishwashers, ovens, and commercial kitchens. New kitchen designs are pushing the material much further. Countertops, backsplashes, islands, cabinet fronts, shelving, vent hoods, and even full appliance walls now use stainless steel as a primary design element rather than a supporting finish. Durability remains one reason behind the shift. Stainless steel resists heat, moisture, stains, and heavy use better than many traditional kitchen materials. Advances in fabrication have also expanded the range of finishes, making the material feel more at home beside wood cabinetry, stone surfaces, painted cabinets, and decorative lighting. These kitchens show how stainless steel has evolved from a practical appliance finish into a material that shapes the entire room. From full metal workstations to subtle accents around cooking zones, the designs demonstrate why the material continues appearing in both professional-inspired and resident...

Old Pallet Wood Turned Into a Hanging Flower Planter That Looks Store-Bought

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Buying hanging planters for a porch or patio often means choosing between lightweight plastic baskets and expensive decorative containers. Emily Burmeister found another option sitting in a pile of old pallet boards. Using reclaimed pallet wood, basic framing lumber, chain, and paint, she built a hanging flower planter designed to hold a standard nursery pot. Instead of filling a wooden box with soil, the planter acts as a decorative shell that surrounds an existing flower container. The approach keeps the project simple while creating a finished piece that adds color and height to an outdoor seating area. Standard Nursery Pot Determined the Planter Size Every measurement started with the flower container. Rather than building a planter first and searching for a plant later, Emily used a nursery pot filled with petunias as the template for the project. The container needed enough clearance to slide inside the wooden frame while remaining supported near the top. Building around ...

She Replaced the Travertine Backsplash and the Wood Cabinets Started Standing Out Again

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Many kitchen updates start with painted cabinets, new countertops, or a complete renovation. Erin Zubot of erinzubotdesign.com focused on a different part of the room. Wood cabinets, dark countertops, appliances, and flooring remained in place throughout the project. @erinzubotdesign Beige travertine tile, a mosaic accent band, and several backsplash patterns covered the walls behind the counters. Those surfaces had become the busiest part of the kitchen. Replacing them with a single geometric white tile changed how the room looks without altering the cabinetry, countertops, or appliances. Beige Travertine Tile Shared the Kitchen With Stained Wood Cabinets @erinzubotdesign The kitchen featured stained wood cabinets with crown molding, dark countertops, and stainless steel appliances. Cabinet construction, storage, and layout already worked well, which made a full remodel difficult to justify. Most of the visual weight came from the wall surfaces behind the counters. Multiple ti...