Facebook Tweet Help Stories Kitchen Toast to tradition Share Tweet Help Rough-cut wood brings an authentic feel A wine Cellar view Features Floor-to-ceiling natural wood wine racks fill this basement cellar. The joists, boards and posts were stained, waxed and oiled to provide an old-world lookPared back to its bare bones, the cellar includes a natural wood counter, which serves as a staging area. The co-owner of the house, wine artist Thomas Arvid, painted the collage artwork on old wine crates. For serious wine connoisseurs, a cellar is about creating an ideal environment for storing wine, rather than a place for entertaining. This was precisely the case for wine artist Thomas Arvid and his wife Vanessa.Thomas Arvid says he wanted a basement cellar built along similar lines to traditional wine cellars in France a simple, straightforward design with no pretensions or gimmicks."Many people make wine cellars very fancy, with cafe chairs and tables for wine tasting. But in reality a cellar is too cold for entertaining." A wine Cellar view Features Floor-to-ceiling natural wood wine racks fill this basement cellar. The joists, boards and posts were stained, waxed and oiled to provide an old-world lookPared back to its bare bones, the cellar includes a natural wood counter, which serves as a staging area. The co-owner of the house, wine artist Thomas Arvid, painted the collage artwork on old wine crates. Working with interior designer Teri Duffy, Arvid chose to play up the raw simplicity of the basement, exposing the concrete foundations and rough-sawn structural columns."These materials have a subliminal effect," he says. "You instinctively feel you are in the bowels of the house, just as you would be in a traditional cellar in the wine country in France."This effect is heightened by the exposed joists and floorboards, which form the ceiling. The boards and supports were stained, waxed and oiled to create the aged look. A wine Cellar view Features Floor-to-ceiling natural wood wine racks fill this basement cellar. The joists, boards and posts were stained, waxed and oiled to provide an old-world lookPared back to its bare bones, the cellar includes a natural wood counter, which serves as a staging area. The co-owner of the house, wine artist Thomas Arvid, painted the collage artwork on old wine crates. "Although we needed a huge amount of storage, which was a design priority, it was also important that the cellar felt like a wine room," says Duffy. "All the racks are raw wood, and the overall look is quite dark and wine-like."Thomas Arvid's own artwork continues this theme there is a collage on a cellar wall made from old wine crates.The cellar complements the Craftsman-style architecture of the house, which was designed to look as though it has evolved over time. Further continuity is provided by the flagstone flooring. This not only appears in the cellar, but also on the back patio and porch. Credit list Interior designer Teri Duffy ASID, Flooring Stone Builder Bob Badger, Story by: Colleen Hawkes 26 Jan, 2012 Kitchen Trendsideas Home kitchen bathroom commercial design Latest Post Stone, wood and metal 17 Nov, 2024 Collaboration and connection 17 Nov, 2024 Memories of the Alhambra 17 Nov, 2024 We know the Specialists Related Book More Books > Home Trends Vol. 28/2 NZ2802 Read More Similar Stories