Western Living Magazine
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6 Spaces That’ll Make You Feel at One with Nature
5 Butler’s Pantries That Will Give You Some Serious Kitchen Envy
6 of Our Fave Salmon Recipes
4 Buzz-Worthy Recipes Every Coffee Lover Needs to Try
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Why You Should Spend Your Next Break In Winnipeg
Vancouver Island’s Ladysmith Mixes Small Town Charm with Big City Culture
BC’s Best-Kept Culinary Destination Secret (For Now)
Wildflower Mercantile’s New Space is Growing More Than Flowers—It’s Growing Community
Spring Refresh: 10 Must-Have Picks to Elevate Your Home Style in 2025
Our Favourite Pieces from the New 2025 Ikea Stockholm Collection
Enter Western Living’s 2025 Designers of the Year Awards—DEADLINE EXTENDED
PHOTOS: Party Pics from the 2025 Western Living Design 25 Awards Party
Announcing the Winners of the 2025 Western Living Design 25 Awards
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
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