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Kitchen electrical complete

Before I move on to the Mansard Victorian’s nursery, here’s a quick post to show how I finished the electrical in the kitchen. There are three lights in here: a ceiling fixture, a bulb in the hood, and a bulb over the sink.

I made the ceiling fixture by combining the base of a table lamp and the shade of a hanging lamp. The ones in the picture below aren’t the ones I used — I had these pieces lying around after using the table lamp shade in the Queen Anne Rowhouse, and after the hanging lamp broke in the Gull Bay Cottage. (Proof, yet again, that nothing should be thrown away, ever… even if it’s broken!)

I painted the base with metallic paints to make it less shiny and more antique looking. If I took pictures at the time, I can’t find them now, but it’s the same paint I used to de-shine the bathroom light.

The shade had a little black dot on it that unfortunately faced front with the light positioned so you can see the little key sticking out of the base (which I wanted to be able to see). Also I wondered if I could make it look more like milk glass by painting it with white Gallery Glass paint.

As it turns out: no, I could not. Wayyy too gloppy.

Fortuitously I’d recently purchased two more of these hanging lamps on eBay. Clear Gallery Glass might have worked better than the white, but I didn’t want to ruin another shade experimenting with it, so I coated the new one with gloss varnish instead.

Here’s the gloppy one. Not great.

And here’s the gloss varnish version. It’s not very shiny, but it looks clean and doesn’t have that black dot on it, so I’ll take it.

(And no, of course I’m not going to throw the gloppy one away! What if I need it for something ten years from now?)

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Finishing the sink area

Back in August, I thought building a cabinet for the Mansard Victorian’s kitchen sink would be a quick diversion before I dove into finishing the nursery. Little did I know it would take me the rest of 2025 to finish. Daisy’s gift to me was spending three hours calm in her crate today while I (mostly) finished the project — it’s a Christmas miracle!

The first task on the to-do list was to hide the cracks of light showing above the upper cabinets.

Since covering the top of the cabinet with crown molding hadn’t worked, I decided instead to build a fake ceiling in front of the cabinet. I found a piece of wood thick enough to cover the crack.

Like with the crown molding, you can see light over this. The opening isn’t square and because of how the bump-out is situated, I just couldn’t figure out why the wood wouldn’t fit flush with the ceiling.

But that’s okay, because now the crack will be hidden by the trim.

I covered the wood with a piece of the scrapbook paper I used on the walls, wrapping it around the end to make sure no bare wood would be visible.

The edge is a bit sloppy, but it’ll be covered up.

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Stained glass kitchen window and a light over the sink

I mentioned at the end of my last post that the doors on the over-the-sink cabinets didn’t close all the way and I wasn’t sure I wanted to mess with them anymore.

Well, I messed with them. I removed each shelf, shaved off a small amount of the back using a utility knife, and glued them back in. Easy fix, really.

Moving on. As shown here, I started adding lights to the kitchen two and a half years ago (yikes). I had planned to use this light over the sink, made from two Houseworks fixtures that I frankensteined together.

The wire is hidden under the roof, and feeds into the nursery where it will be plugged in. (Oh yeah, that’s why I went down this sink cabinet rabbit hole three months ago… I wanted to finish the kitchen electricity so I could work on the nursery…)

Later I moved that fixture out into the room and put this one in the bump-out.

But that light gets in the way of the upper cabinets. Time for a new plan. I decided to insert a Cir-Kit screw-base bulb socket behind the cornice on the uppers, same as I did with the stove hood.

The piece of trim glued across the top of the cabinets doesn’t go all the way back to the wall. This pencil line shows where that trim ends. I have just enough space to drill a hole for the fixture.

I hadn’t considered that this fixture is a little taller than the thickness of the top of the bump-out, so the back side sticks out. I can add strip wood around the edges of the bump-out to make it a little taller. This will provide a cavity under the roof where I can leave some excess wire, allowing me to pull the fixture out into the kitchen if I need to change the bulb.

Inside, the bulb will be hidden behind the cornice.

Now it’s time to do something about that big gaping window hole. After a lot of pondering, looking through my stash at different windows, and looking online at pictures of kitchens, I got the idea to make a stained glass window out of laser-cut mullions (sold by D’s Miniatures on eBay).

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