• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header left navigation
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to site footer
  • about
    • services
    • team
  • portfolio
  • press
Annie Elliott Design, Washington DC

Annie Elliott Design

Greater Washington DC

  • book
  • blog
  • contact

3 cheap ways to perk up a tired kitchen

Annie Elliott | July 21, 2009

A friend told me the other day that they’ve nixed plans to renovate their kitchen, at least for now.

I keep hearing that the economy is looking up, but in the short run, here are three inexpensive things you can do to perk up your tired kitchen.

1. Add a rug – a colorful one.

Yes, it will get trashed over time, but it will bring warmth and character to an out-of date kitchen. Look for flatweaves, patterns, and darker colors. (If you’ve been nervous about ordering a rug online, this is the time to experiment. These are from Rugman.com.)


2. Address the windows.

First, buy a cheapie cafe curtain rod at a store like Linens & Things or Bed Bath & Beyond.

Using rings with clips, hang vintage dishcloths; look on Etsy or in museum shops online. Hang the rod roughly in the center of the window, so that the fabric brushes the window sill.


(The flamingo dishcloths are through Etsy, and the hilarious onion one is from the Santa Monica Museum of Art gift shop.)

To illustrate, this is the “temporary” window treatment I put in our master bathroom. It’s been up for four and a half years. I’d just unearthed the 28th UNOPENED box of linen handkerchiefs my grandmother had squirreled away for, oh, forty years or so, and I resolved to put them to use. (You’ll be using more festive, colorful pieces in your kitchen, though.)


3. Hang photographs or plates.

No photographs smaller than 8 x 10, please, framed in lucite, and hang several. Kitchen walls are a fantastic place for your honeymoon safari pics or other of your artistic photographic endeavors (I do suggest pictures of things rather than people). If you don’t have a tile backsplash, hang pictures in that space instead.

As for plates, I’m talking about funky contemporary ones, not Grannie’s. You feel me? Hanging one or several over the sink looks especially great.

Good luck, Gentle Readers. Remember: these are temporary measures to hold us until we bring in the wrecking balls and go crazy with kitchen renovations. Hopefully, that day is right around the corner.

Added 7.22.09: As fate would have it, Young House Love today writes about a fourth way to improve your kitchen – an “easy upgrade,” they call it. Easy, cheap ‘n instant!

Category: Rugs, Window treatments

Sidebar

Subscribe

 

Bossy Color Blog

Categories

  • Art + accessories »
  • Bedroom »
  • Color + paint color »
  • Dining room »
  • Furniture + upholstery »
  • Kids »
  • Kitchen + bath »
  • Lighting »
  • Living Room + Family Room »
  • Renovation »
  • Rugs »
  • Wallpaper »
  • Window treatments »

View Portfolio

view Bossy Color's portfolio

Instagram

annieelliottdesign

View Instagram post by annieelliottdesign

Jun 17

Open post by annieelliottdesign with ID 18106157639319026
“Much of the wallpaper [in the Victorian era]—fabric, too—was made with arsenic,’ explains Elliott. ‘There are worse ways to go, I suppose.’”I loved speaking with @allisonpduncan @vogueliving about the art of using two wallpapers in one room. Happy Wallpaper Wednesday!#interiordesign #wallpaper #vogueliving #designopinions #annieelliottdesignSlide 1 📸  by Stacy Zarin Goldberg, Design by Annie ElliottSlide 2 📸 by Leslee Mitchell, Design by Kim ScodroSlide 3 📸 by Donna Dotan, Design by Ariel OkinSlide 4 📸 by Gordon Gregory, Design by Jenny Holladay

annieelliottdesign

View Instagram post by annieelliottdesign

Jun 13

Open post by annieelliottdesign with ID 17913412296404982
Pink, light yellow, and gold-y tan combine to create a soft, unexpected color palette. The quiet colors are sophisticated together, and the palette will age beautifully as this tween moves through high school and college. (Her parents won’t even have to redecorate if it becomes a guest bedroom someday! But one step at a time…)#homedesign #paintinspo #bedroomdesign

annieelliottdesign

View Instagram post by annieelliottdesign

Jun 10

Open post by annieelliottdesign with ID 17929516656341682
Deep down, I believe that a house isn’t a home without wallpaper 😊 My latest blog post identifies five unexpected places you can use wallpaper — and some are small! Wallpapering the space behind your island stools could be your gateway to my favorite home furnishing. If you have other creative spots for wallpaper, I’d love to hear about them!#wallpaperinspo #interiordesign #wallpaper

annieelliottdesign

View Instagram post by annieelliottdesign

Jun 9

Open post by annieelliottdesign with ID 18112589929761575
Welcome to my new before-and-after series! 🥰 I take you through my thinking as I design a space — my “process,” as it were. Pretty pictures are involved too, of course. I hope you enjoy it!This was a super fun project: a historic townhouse with the challenge of a loooong shoebox-shaped front room. You know the kind. Here’s how we made this color-and-pattern-loving client’s challenging space amazing. Like this series? Please let me know! #interiordesigner #windowtreatments #wallpaper

annieelliottdesign

View Instagram post by annieelliottdesign

Jun 5

Open post by annieelliottdesign with ID 18087273683080656
Don’t let your porch be a throwaway space! Make it a room. Get a high quality indoor/outdoor rug. Make sure your furniture is COMFY. Find a cordless lamp (they’re everywhere now!). Hang art! You can even add a vintage console table or cabinet if you’re ok with it weathering over time 🕰️. #interiordesign #porchdesign

annieelliottdesign

View Instagram post by annieelliottdesign

Jun 3

Open post by annieelliottdesign with ID 18314336014263171
It’s Wallpaper Wednesday! This week we feature Paper Trail by Lewis and Wood. Lewis and Wood launched Paper Trail in the fall of 2025 as one of four patterns in their History Papers Collection. Paper Trail was inspired by ancient rock carvings - 600–2,000 years old! - from various sites in America. It was named after the site Newspaper Rock, Utah.You know I love anything with an animal :) But there are 2 genres, right? Juvenile and…let’s call it *versatile*. To me, Paper Trail falls into the latter category, featuring deer, horses, buffalo, and foxes on a background that resembles the texture of rocks. It’s primitive, not cartoonish. I could see using this in a small bedroom; a breakfast nook (why? Can’t tell you, it’s just a feeling); or a hallway, because the pattern isn’t overwhelming.#wallpaperinspo #interiordesign #homedesign

annieelliottdesign

View Instagram post by annieelliottdesign

May 28

Open post by annieelliottdesign with ID 18102883841082172
For those of you lucky enough to have a beach house, now’s the time to start thinking about decorating beyond traditional “costal decor!” Step one? Consider a color palette other than blue and white ;) See my latest blog post for more! 🏖️ 🐚#beachhouseinteriors #interiordesign #eastcoast

annieelliottdesign

View Instagram post by annieelliottdesign

May 22

Open post by annieelliottdesign with ID 18125488516719287
I follow two rules when mixing patterns in the same space: vary the scale, and vary the subject.I was excited to share this and other insights on pattern splicing with @ericafinamore from @apartmenttherapy! #interiordesign #patternsplicing #patternmixing #designopinions #annieelliottdesign

annieelliottdesign

View Instagram post by annieelliottdesign

May 20

Open post by annieelliottdesign with ID 18082241465136951
It’s Wallpaper Wednesday! This week we’re featuring Deconstructed Stripe by Schumacher (in collaboration with Miles Redd).This pattern pays tribute to the legendary decorator Albert Hadley. Redd was inspired by Hadley’s contemporary, streamlined designs that played with scale and proportion. Deconstructed Stripe is impactful on its own but also looks INCREDIBLE next to other patterns.@schumacher1889 #designinspo #wallpaper #interiordesigner
Follow

Looking for something?

Don’t miss a single post

 

Where classic and modern hang out and drink gin.

  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • Pinterest
  • Facebook
American Society of Interior Designers Firm Partner

© 2026 · Annie Elliott Design · privacy policy