Call it impending empty nest syndrome or simply a reminder to self that my house is my laboratory, and it is here that I should take risks.
I have a galley kitchen. The backsplash on the stove wall is AMAZING. As well it should be, since it was a journey to end all journeys until the marvelous artists at Billet Collins bailed me out.

I blogged about it extensively, if you’d like to check the archives ;)

I never got the opposite wall quite right, though.
It was naked for MONTHS – possibly a year. (You know how you get used to things.)
My thought was that I didn’t want to compete with the Chinoiserie. A normal person would have done white subway tile and called it a day.

But you know me. I *did* consider white tile in a different size, but with white cabinets and marble counters, it would have been so much white.
So I thought about different neutral tile that would work w/ the veining in the Belgia marble countertops.


I even thought about red. But eew.


Then I saw Cameron Diaz’s green kitchen with a brass sheet backsplash.

There is some gold in the painted backsplash, so brass was a nice idea.

Quite frankly, though, I didn’t know how to make it happen. Didn’t know the right artisan, etc. And I was running out of stamina.

So I called my friends at Billet Collins again, and they created a gold reverse-painted glass backsplash for me.

It’s fine. Just…fine. No fault of Billet’s – they did exactly what I asked. But I never loved it. It’s so yellow. And I can see the circles where the globs of glue attach it to the wall. Others say they can’t, mind you. But I can.

So I put my thinking cap on again. We recently put antique mirror tiles into a client’s extra kitchen to make the cabinets feel bar-like.


Hmmmmm! I thought.
Then I discovered that there exists GOLD antique mirrored tiles.

I know it sounds kind of gross. Kind of 70s, kind of shag carpet, kind of…well, I’m sure you have an adjective or two.

But I have a hunch. And it will reflect the pretty backsplash and make the kitchen feel wider.

Remember: my house is my lab. I’ll keep you posted.
Gentle Readers, this should have posted last week! I apologize! There was a glitch I didn’t know about until today. The post vanished into thin air. So this is the re-do. I hope you like it.
Annie Elliott Design is based in Washington, DC, and we have offices in St. Michaels, Maryland, and Middlebury, Vermont. Be sure and catch our advice in House Beautiful about transitioning between design styles!