Organized Kitchen Space

The single most important thing in a kitchen is truly how it functions.  Having a well-organized kitchen is imperative to achieve a high functioning kitchen.  There are many types of organizing solutions that can be incorporated into a good kitchen design to give you the specific type of storage you require for your kitchen.

Some great storage solutions are pull-out spice rack, two tier cutlery, pull out storage, tray storage, wrap storage, pot & pan storage, pull out counter-top, grocery bag storage, drawer spice rack, pot & pan storage, pull down accessible upper storage.


Storage options and organizational items for every item in the kitchen and pantry- helps to utilize space, to help your kitchen and pantry function and provide maximum storage.

Time2Design, Inc. provides cabinetry and interior design from initial concept design thru completed installation. With over 30 years experience Time2Design prides itself on providing and maintaining the highest level of customer service and satisfaction.  We strive to make your space function in the most efficient and visually appealing way.  

Our passion is to provide the highest level of customer service and satisfaction by continually educating ourselves, developing our skills, and always working to increase our knowledge and abilities.  As we are constantly evolving within our field of expertise we are able to recognize and implement a multitude of design styles that meet the needs of our clients.  Give us a call 941-378-9964 and let us help you with your kitchen oragnization.  Learn more about us at www.time2design.biz 

The Brizo Jason Wu Experience


So, wow, where do I begin? First I have to send a thank-you out, to Pamela Rodriguez for nominating me to Brizo to be selected to attend an, all-expense paid, trip to New York City for an Amazing Fashion Week event.

I have to say that when I was first contacted by my long time twitter friend Pam, @pamdesigns, I half-heartedly shrugged my shoulders and replied with “Sure count me in”, wink wink, thinking how or why I would be selected for whatever this Brizo thing was. In the message from Pam there were a few links to previous attendee’s articles, and I admit I was curious enough to check them out. Looked real, sounded real, and thought to myself, nah, really? do I honestly believe they will pick me? So I sent Pam a reply say sure I would be interested, sat it aside and didn’t give it another thought – ok one other thought, How nice it was that this person whom I have only known through our connection on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn, would think of me and second thought was wow this internet thing brings out all the crazy scams…HA!



(Laughing out loud now for real) -
How silly I thought those thoughts were when I boarded the airplane to New York City, and then chuckled to myself again as I was texting home to my friends from the backseat of the black Lincoln town car that was driving me to the hotel – compliments again of Brizo. Yep, that’s right when they said “Transportation provided” I assumed I would be schlepping my bags across the airport looking for the out of the way location of hard to miss advertisement wrapped courtesy van corral.


Side Note (before we get to the really good stuff) -





You know when you are traveling in the airport and you get to baggage claim after the three mile walk from the terminal, then you stand like a robot at the carousel waiting for your bag to come tumbling out on the conveyor belt. And you wait, and wait and wait and finally it spits your bag out and you are praying the zipper doesn’t break tossing your personals about because you over packed. When finally you see your bag, relief sets in because it is still intact and then you have to juggle the carry on (because it wouldn’t all fit in the suitcase) as you try and get through the crowd of other robots to pull it quickly off the moving mechanism. All the while thinking how amazing that your bag arrived to the exact spot I am standing one bag amongst thousands. Oh and then the schlepping it thought comes back to you after you strained your back getting it off the carousel. Ok let’s fast forward - I think you know what I am talking about.



Thanks to Brizo all that was taken away for me the moment I saw this man dressed in a black suit holding a sign that said BRIZO. I knew in that instant I would probably not be the one trying to maneuver the luggage carousel. I always see those little signs with people’s names on them waiting to pick someone up and secretly think, “Oh how nice it would be if that sign had my name on it”. Well ok so it didn’t have my name on it but I knew it was for me when the sign said BRIZO. And yes ladies they really do carry your bags for you.

Alright enough about the pampering, gosh and that was all before I even got to the hotel and met any of those “BRIZO” people, how could I not love them. Well the skeptic in me was enjoying the moment and reserving the right to decide what I thought. I mean really anyone can provide smoke and mirrors – if you don’t have anything to back it up well I can see right through that. And I have to say,  Brizo can back it up, read on…

So I arrived at the Eventi Hotel in mid-town Manhattan, checked in to my 16th floor corner room with a view of the Empire State Building.

Fitting for my reference to Jay-Z’s Empire State of Mind theme song previously posted (yeah I know I know Eric posted it first, but I didn’t know that at the time – we were instant friends before we met because of that – LOL).


Side Note (what an amazing, talented group I was part of)

Our Brizo group, we like to refer to ourselves as “The Dream Team”- find us on twitter #dream11, is a diverse mix of amazingly talented, individuals, brought together by Brizo and held together by our common interests in all things Design.

We are The Dream Team - Raina Cox, Arne Salvesen, Eric Miller, Carmen Christensen, Richard Herb, Lori Gilder, Michelle Carangi, Tamara Stephenson, Michelle Jennings Wiebe, JB Bartkowiak, Nicole Dufour DuRocher, Jenny Rector, Leslie Seaton Fine, Jonathan Legate, Roberta Bauer Kravette, Sean Culman, Patricia Davis Brown, Nick Lovelady, and Kymberly Weiner. Brizo Fashion Week Event 2011 / Jason Wu

I am going to have to at some point blog /talk in more detail about each of them. I was and still am inspired by their individual talents and find great delight in learning from them and what they do. I am honored to be in their company and excited that we have created this life bond thru this experience where we can all learn and grow together.

I know I know, ok moving on. So the first night we arrived and were welcomed by Brizo and brought together at an intimate cocktail meet and greet gathering in our hotel. It was interesting to meet everyone in person and hear their story. And I found it comforting to know that we were all brought together in very similar ways. There seemed to be this instant connection and we all meshed together in our own unique ways.




So after a late night of martini’s, an evening walk in the city it was time the next morning to see what this whole Brizo thing really was all about.



We spent the day with Brizo’s team learning all about their company and what goes into their product from start to finish. We were given an amazing presentation by Brizo’s industrial design team and shown the step by step process they go thru even before pen touches paper. They spend a good deal of time exploring around the world and often their inspiration is drawn from their travels and experiences as they create new products. There is a direct correlation between Brizo’s designs as it relates to fashion, architecture, history and a multitude of textures, patterns and life we are all surrounded by daily. As a designer I know I am always aware of the textures, colors and shapes that are around me every day and I find great inspiration from nature and life as it surrounds me.



Brizo uses their inspirations to develop and produce their fashion forward faucet designs, much the same way designer Jason Wu draws from for his inspiration. Brizo began collaborating with Jason Wu in 2006, well before Wu was so widely recognized for designing the inaugural gown for Michelle Obama and their relationship with Wu’s has escalated as both have become more well known.

During our day with Brizo we were invited to participate and give insight and opinion on some very top secret new designs they are developing. Some were in the very early stages of development and others were already slated launch dates. Was fun to be a part of informative exploration of what we liked or didn’t like about product ideas they shared with us.

As is with everything I found it interesting that our group of 19 was not always in agreement and that much like our fashion sense was different, our design esthetic was also in many respects polar opposite and sometimes exactly the same. Here before me was a group of sophisticated, well-educated and informed design professionals with differing opinions on what was or wasn’t acceptable design. It was for me a perfect example of how important it is to take into consideration that everyone’s individual home and the products they select and recognize their home and fashion is truly a reflection of who they are individually, as it should be. Otherwise, as I always say, we would all drive white cars, wear black and live in a cardboard box.


The individual diversity is what makes fashion and design, Fashion and Design - and is why I love what I do.

Fast-forward to Friday, Jason Wu Fashion show day. This was for me the pinnacle of the trip and everything I had hoped it would be and more. Words cannot even explain so instead please enjoy a few photos.

the following section photo credit Jayme Thornton




The after party and fireside chat with Jason Wu.

By the time we arrived at the after party I was overcome with the amazing city scape we overlooked from our after party penthouse location. The culmination of three amazing days with The Dream Team, meeting the wonderful people from Brizo, the Jason Wu runway show, and now an after party with Jason Wu and his entourage – a truly amazing emotion highpoint for me. I had to stop and take it all in and again found myself thinking, wow they picked me and I was able to share this experience with these amazing designers and create this lifelong bond with 18 people just like me.
the following section photo credit Carmen Christensen



Thank you Brizo for having the forward thinking to bring us together in a forum that was both inspirational and informative. Thank you for giving us the insight to step out of our everyday life and spend some time with you Dreaming.

Here’s to our Dreams! Bravo Brizo!!

The Dream Team




We are The Dream Team - Raina Cox, Arne Salvesen, Eric Miller, Carmen Christensen, Richard Herb, Lori Gilder, Michelle Carangi,Tamara Stephenson, Michelle Jennings Wiebe, JB Bartkowiak, Nicole Dufour DuRocher, Jenny Rector, Leslie Seaton Fine, Jonathan Legate, Roberta Bauer Kravette, Sean Culman, Patricia Davis Brown, Nick Lovelady, Kymberly Weiner. Brizo Fashion Week Event 2011 / Jason Wu

Under Cabinet Lighting

If you don't currently have undercabinet lights then you truly are missing an amazing opportunity to be able to have adequate task lighting on your kitchen counters.  There are various types of undercabinet light fixtures that can be used, the most common being flouresant, led, halogen and xenon. 

photo credit Kichler Lighting











XENON modular


LED modular


FLOURESCENT modular

Various Styles Of Puck Lights
 




Under Cabinet lights help to create task light as well as ambiant light and there are multiple solutions that have the capability to be on a dimmer switch. 

flourescent lamp
Science Dictionary
fluorescent lamp (fl -rěs'ənt)
An electric lamp that produces light through fluorescence. In most fluorescent lamps, a mixture of argon and mercury gas contained in a glass bulb is stimulated by an electric current, producing ultraviolet rays. These rays strike a fluorescent phosphor coating on the interior surface of the bulb, causing it to emit visible light. Fluorescent lamps are much more efficient than incandescent lamps because very little energy is lost as heat. Compare incandescent lamp.
The American Heritage® Science Dictionary  Copyright © 2002. Published by Houghton Mifflin. All rights reserved.

LED
light-emitting diode: a semiconductor diode that emits light when conducting current and is used in electronic equipment, especially for displaying readings on digital watches, calculators, etc.

Halogen lamp
–noun / a gas-filled, high-intensity incandescent lamp having a tungsten filament and containing a small amount of a halogen, such as iodine, that vaporizes on heating and redeposits any evaporated tungsten particles back onto the filament: used especially in motion-picture projectors and automobile headlights.
Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2011.

Xenon
Science Dictionary
xenon (zē'nŏn')
A colorless, odorless element in the noble gas group occurring in extremely small amounts in the atmosphere. It was the first noble gas found to form compounds with other elements. Xenon is used in lamps that make intense flashes, such as strobe lights and flashbulbs for photography. Atomic number 54; atomic weight 131.29; melting point -111.9°C; boiling point -107.1°C; density (gas) 5.887 grams per liter; specific gravity (liquid) 3.52 (-109°C). See Periodic Table.
The American Heritage® Science Dictionary Copyright © 2002. Published by Houghton Mifflin. All rights reserved.

Brizo / Jason Wu

I am in the midst of a long wordy tell you all about it post, but in the meantime I just wanted to share with you one of my favorite Jason Wu pieces from his Fall 2011 collection.  When this came down the runway and passed in front of me I truly did gasp.  So beautiful and understated simplicity and the bit of color peaking out along the bottom edge adds that bit of whimsical flaire that makes it a beautiful feminine part of the collection. 

photo credit Jayme Thornton

Much the same way with Brizo's Virage collection catches you off guard with the twist of metal.

photo credit brizo  

At first glance you see the simplicity of a beautiful faucet with a beautiful line and then it grabs you when your eye shows you the twisted spout....a beautiful expression of the iconic Old World wroght iron style with the sophistication of the smooth Brizo Finish. 









photo credit brizo


The Virage™ Bath Collection Provides A Unique Twisting, Turning Action for A New Look in Plumbing Products

Reinvention is at the core of what it means to be fashionable. The Virage™ bath collection by Brizo®, the fashion faucet brand, beautifully embodies this spirit with its evolution of a classic faucet design. Virage refines the familiar, timeless geometry of a graceful arcing spout with an unexpected twisting, turning effect. The result is a hallmark Brizo design unlike anything else, one that further advances Brizo’s fashion-forward position.

Pictured here during our Thursday Introduction to Brizo - Judd Lord
photo credit carmen christensen

“Virage was inspired by the beautiful iron work we found throughout Europe. It was everywhere -- gates, balconies and door hardware – and it was stunning,” said Judd Lord, Brizo brand director of industrial design. “We used that inspiration to create a design that is outside the usual categories of traditional and modern. By offering a variety of finishes, Virage has the ability to appeal to a wide range of design sensibilities.”

The unique design of Virage has gained international recognition. The faucet received an honorable mention in the 2010 Red Dot product design competition, one of the largest design competitions worldwide.

Twisting, turning details are carried through every element of the collection, from the faucet handles to the showerheads. The Virage collection includes a full suite of fixtures that provide luxury and customization for the homeowner:

• Widespread Lavatory
• Vessel widespread lavatory
• Two handle wall mount lavatory
• Three and four hole roman tubs
• Wall and ceiling mount raincan showerheads
• Medium Flow TempAssure® shower trims
• Sensori™ High Flow Thermostatic shower trims

Rooted in inventive technology, the new raincan showerheads feature Brizo’s H20kinetic Technology®, providing a warmer, more luxurious spray that uses less water by controlling water’s shape, velocity and thermal dynamics – without sacrificing the user experience. There are two options: a water-efficient 6”
wall mount that flows at 2.0 gpm; and an 8-inch ceiling mount that flows at the standard 2.5 gpm. In addition, Virage lavatories are WaterSense labeled with a flow of 1.5 gpm and incorporate a laminar flow that gracefully delivers a clear, smooth, stream from the faucet spout.

The Virage bath collection is available in five finishes: Polished Chrome, Venetian Bronze®, Brilliance® Brushed Nickel, Brilliance® Polished Nickel, and Brilliance® Brushed Bronze, each available in a limited lifetime warranty. One of Brizo’s silver finishes gives the collection a clean, art deco sensibility. For a more traditional look, consider one of Brizo’s warmer bronze finishes. A complete line of accessories – including lighting and a mirror - is also available to carry the distinctive design throughout the entire bath. (Virage descriptive/press release provided by Brizo/Media Group during my all expense paid trip to New York City for this event.)