How to create a COTTAGECORE🍄 kitchen

Hey everyone!
I thought I'd share the basic steps to creating a cottagecore-themed kitchen. This really brings back childhood memories, and is a great way to embrace the aesthetic and lifestyle.
I have also created a Pinterest board which credits all the original creators that are featured in this video. It also has plenty of additional inspiration, colours, themes and more. Feel free to check that out below:
www.pinterest.nz/hauntedwillo...
Hope you all have a lovely week,
- GB
Timestamps:
0:00 - intro
0:06 - the basics
0:22 - colour scheme
0:30 - aesthetic categories
0:53 - existing components
1:06 - the farm-style
1:30 - chic style
1:55 - contents
2:06 - quick disclaimer
2:41 - everyday essentials
3:03 - ceramics
3:22 - tip one
3:41 - what to buy
4:07 - tea set
4:39 - baking dishes
4:48 - vintage warning
5:31 - formal pieces
6:11 - aesthetic ideas
6:28 - simmer pot recipe
6:36 - more ideas
8:28 - outro
#cottagecore #kitchen #vintage

Пікірлер: 17

  • @pearlygabe
    @pearlygabe18 күн бұрын

    Hi there, I'm from Australia. This content is so useful, I'm in the midst of creating cottagecore environment

  • @snuggleb100
    @snuggleb100 Жыл бұрын

    Lots of great ideas! Love baskets, they are my fav. Vintage plates and tea pots really add the cottagecore look too!

  • @gemmabxx

    @gemmabxx

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you😊

  • @mama_w3176
    @mama_w31766 ай бұрын

    I’ve always loved shabbychic / cottagecore. This video was super super helpful! Thank you for sharing 💛

  • @gemmabxx

    @gemmabxx

    6 ай бұрын

    Glad it helped😊

  • @lisavoegtly1475
    @lisavoegtly14752 ай бұрын

    I have used my grandma‘s aluminum pan that was passed down through my mom and then to me every year for scalloped potatoes at Easter and sweet potatoes/yams at Thanksgiving. To think of not using that because there may be toxins leaching out of it into my foods, I’d rather not even have a meal then on those holidays if I can’t use that pan. Nothing happened to me so far so I’m going to keep using it. To me, using the mixing bowls and pans that my grandmother and my mom used to prepare holiday meals with, our much part of the holidays as who I spend them with. Great video otherwise.

  • @gemmabxx

    @gemmabxx

    2 ай бұрын

    Definitely agree that using family heirlooms makes things a bit more special. Sounds to me like yours have been very well-looked after, so there should be no issues there😊 The problems usually start when pans are bought from second-hand stories, or found in old buildings, and they aren't properly restored/have never been looked after properly so their surfaces are damaged and leach.

  • @user-ib1ff3th4v
    @user-ib1ff3th4v Жыл бұрын

    Someday. ☺️

  • @mountaingirl1797
    @mountaingirl17973 күн бұрын

    No on the older cracked/crackled china ‼️ I inquired

  • @hannahduggan3599
    @hannahduggan35995 ай бұрын

    Cottagecore is so beautiful, but since I'm 27 years old, I feel like I'm too old for it.

  • @gemmabxx

    @gemmabxx

    5 ай бұрын

    I've heard this quite a few times and I think it often helps to look at the root of what cottagecore really is. I think the key is to look past the surface-level aesthetic of the clothing/Pinterest aesthetic and really delve into creating a home that echoes the countryside, perhaps learning some hobbies/crafts, exploring new languages/mythologies/history, taking time to go explore the natural world etc. I'm lucky that I come from a family who have been firmly rooted in "cottagecore" and farming ways of life so I've seen everyone from my great-grandparents to my nephews and nieces get involved. I think the biggest takeaway I have from my own experience - cottagecore is learning to appreciate the slow and simple in the mundane - things that revolve around what is important to you. That's just my opinion of course😊

  • @hannahduggan3599

    @hannahduggan3599

    5 ай бұрын

    @gemmabxx Thanks, but when I was 20 years old, I was on a school trip at the mall with my class and some friends of mine from other classes. I saw this cottagecore style dress that was in my size from the young ladies' section. When I wanted to buy it, one of my teachers said, "Hannah, that dress is way too young for you. You are too old for anything cottagecore. You're an adult, so you need to start dressing like one. Be more serious!" What do adults dress like nowadays? Most of them are wearing onesies in public while carrying around stuffed animals while more and more little kids are wearing suits, ties, cartoon character clothes, crop tops, booty shorts, fisnets, high-heels, and makeup. One of my other teachers said, "Hannah, when my mother was your age, she always wore dresses like that. She still does to this day. And she's 93 years old! So, if my mother isn't too old to wear cottagecore style clothes, then neither are you." How adults dressed a very long time ago: Suits, ties, high-heels, crop tops, booty shorts, fishnets, and faces full of makeup. How adults dress now: Onesies, high pigtails, cartoon character clothes, and carry around stuffed animals. That one teacher who told me that I was too old for anything cottagecore was wearing a T-Shirt with all the Sesame Street characters on it. Yeah. And she had the nerve to tell me that I was too old for cottagecore while she was wearing a Sesame Street T-Shirt.

  • @thenakedeve

    @thenakedeve

    5 ай бұрын

    Who cares what other people think? Do what makes you happy! Don’t wait til you’re my age (41) to stop giving a 💩 about what other people think! It’s such a waste of your time & energy!

  • @hannahduggan3599

    @hannahduggan3599

    5 ай бұрын

    @@thenakedeve Thank you for the good advice.

  • @messinalyle4030

    @messinalyle4030

    Ай бұрын

    If people over the age of twenty are too old for cottage core, then why do you think I have run across so many DIY videos on decorating your house cottage core-style, like this one? And the videos always seem to be shot in a house as opposed to an apartment. Do you think the average person under twenty owns their own house? It sounds like that teacher of yours was pretty ignorant.