Western Living Magazine
The Most-Popular Western Living Stories of 2024
This Is Your Sign to Put a Big, Bold Light Fixture Above Your Dining Room Table
One to Watch: A Light Studio Redefines Modern Lighting
Editors’ Picks: Our Favourite Western Living Recipes of 2024
My Two Fave Wines of the Year Were From Pouilly Fuissé
Yes, You Want to Make Christmas Crackers Tonight
Editors’ Picks: Our Favourite Western Living Travel Stories of 2024
Winter Getaway Guide 2024: Wine, Bavarian Charm and Luxe Lodging Without the Skis
Local Winter Getaway 2024: A Non-Skier’s Guide to the Perfect Whistler Weekend
The Best Home Accessories Our Editors Bought This Year
Editors’ Picks: The Best Books of 2024
What the Editors of Western Living Are Asking For This Christmas
Join Us for Our First Western Living Design 25 Party!
Announcing the Finalists for the 2025 Western Living Design 25 Awards
The Western Living Design 25 People’s Choice Awards: Voting Is Now Open
You don't need a whole renovation to make the kitchen feel freshsometimes a fun accessory or cool new gadget is all it takes.
Got a case of the kitchen blahs? Don’t break out the sledgehammer just yet—a quirky new tea towel, a piece of artisanal pottery, or a coffee-snob-approved new gadget might just be the cure. Here’s six pieces that might just help you love your kitchen again. (Of course, if a new wine rack isn’t enough to satisfy, take a peek through our archive of kitchen stories to get some inspiration for a bigger change.)
Find some tea towels that make you smile.Designer secret: tea towels are the throw pillows of the kitchen—an easy way to swap in colour and personality. These sweet Lint and Honey tea towels ($76), screen-printed with hearts, crosses, scales or (our fave) pickles sketched by Canadian designer Andrea Shum, will do nicely for your next style infusion. Stylegarage, Vancouver, stylegarage.com; Kiya Home, Calgary, kiyahome.com
Upgrade your dishware.West River Field Lab ceramics (pieces from $20), a collection of minimalist dishware crafted by Japanese designer Nobuhito Nishigawara, add a layer of hand-hewn beauty to the classic white dinner plate. Old Faithful, Vancouver, oldfaithfulshop.com; ; Kit, Calgary, kitinteriorobjects.com
Treat yourself to a fun new gadget (lemonade, anyone?)Whip up a batch of fresh honey lemonade in a snap with the Zing 54 carafe ($45)—it has a built-in citrus reamer, muddler and storage cap. You’re officially patio season-ready. Cook Culture, Victoria, cookculture.com; Choices Market, Vancouver, choicesmarkets.com; Hillaby’s Tools for Cooks, Edmonton, toolsforcooks.ca; Twisted Goods, Calgary, twistedgoods.ca
Store your wine in style.The Nilsson wine shelf ($1,059)—crafted with ecologically friendly Malaysian wood and a non-toxic MDF coating as part of Rove Concept’s Kure collection—may look sleek and modern, but it incorporates the care and attention of an old-school home bar, complete with upside-down glass storage and secure wine racking. Rove Concepts, Vancouver, roveconcepts.com
Toss your broken coffee maker.We have it on good authority from our favourite coffee snobs that pour-over is the only way to go. Bodum apparently has the same sources—they’ve introduced a new line of Pour Over coffee makers ($40), complete with a permanent filter and a selection of poppy colours. Penna and Co., Victoria, pennakitchen.com; Ming Wo, Vancouver, mingwo.com; Hudson’s Bay, across the West, thebay.com
Don’t forget: Flowers instantly refresh a space.Tuck the trio of slim tubular vases into the larger vessel, or spread them out to show off pretty picked blossoms individually. Either way, the ceramic, rubber-painted Ferm Living Collect vases ($138) are a standout. Espace D, Vancouver, espacedonline.com; Kit, Calgary, kitinteriorobjects.com
Are you over 18 years of age?