

10 Easy Pieces: Space-Saving Stackable Drinking Glasses
by Alexa Hotz
One purchase that’s changed my life is a set of stackable glasses. Where there once was a mess of glassware, now three take up the footprint of one, stacking neatly and making room for more tableware (a big plus). Here are our favorite everyday glasses designed for stacking.
Above: A few of us at Remodelista rely on the Toyo-Sasaki HS Stackable Glass Tumbler; $43 for a pack of six at Jinen.
Above: A set of four Iittala’s Clear Lempi Glasses is currently on sale for $66.70 from Finnish Design Shop.
Above: Designed by Christian Metzner for New Tendency, the Rien Drinking Glass is €46 for a set of four from New Tendency.
Above: A set of six Picardie Glass Tumblers is $36 at Williams-Sonoma.
Above: A set of six Williams-Sonoma Open Kitchen Tumblers is $47.70 for the short size and $95.40 for the tall size.
Above: Menu’s Stackable Glasses are made of mouth-blown glass; $144 from Quarter Square.
Above: Ikea’s Pokal Glasses are modeled after the classic Picardie glass; 99 cents each.
Above: The Duralex Gigogne Glass is $24 for a set of six from Boston General Store.
Above: Ikea’s Reko Glasses are $3.99 for a pack of six.
Above: The Iittala Kartio Tumblers are currently on sale from Finnish Design Shop: $24.40 for a set of two, available in a slew of colorways.
For more on glassware, see our posts:
- 10 Easy Pieces: Elegant Everyday Drinking Glasses, Editors’ Picks Edition
- 10 Easy Pieces: Remodelista Editors’ Favorite Everyday Wine Glasses
N.B.: This story originally appeared on June 1, 2016 and has been updated with all new links, sources, and pricing.

New England Practical: The Case for Painted Wood Floors in the Summer Cottage
by Annie Quigley
This week we’re revisiting some of the most popular summer stories from the archives. Here’s one:
Every summer I make a beeline for one of my favorite summertime haunts: Nunan’s Lobster Hut in my hometown in Maine. My favorite thing about it is not the long rows of benches that line the interior or the way the building is perched over a salt marsh, but the gray boat paint that covers the wood floors and tables. I imagine that the owners stock gallons of it and add a new coat each season, the layers built up over 65-plus summers.
Like splatter-painted floors (which “hide a multitude of sins,” Justine writes of her own cottage floors in DIY: Splatter-Painted Floors), painted wood floors—so often seen in summer cottages in Maine and on the Cape—are all about New England practicality: They’re cost-effective, brilliantly conceal summer debris like sand and dirt, and need only another coat of paint when they wear. They’re also wholly unfussy and evocative of the carefree summerhouse.
Take a look at a few favorites in summerhouses past. (And for much more on the merits of boat and deck paint, check out our new book, Remodelista in Maine.)
Above: In a cottage perched on a salt marsh in Falmouth, Massachusetts, the architect/designers painted the wood floors throughout in a California Paint high-gloss finish, for practicality’s sake (and brightness). For more, see A Shipshape Cape Cod Cottage Inspired by Wes Anderson’s ‘The Life Aquatic’.
Above: Further inland, in the Catskills, Lisa Przystup and Jonathon Linaberry painted the existing wood floors of their farmhouse in Sherwin Williams’s [product id="757491"]Extra White[/product] as a cost-saving measure. Photograph from The Catskills Farmhouse of Two Brooklyn Creatives, Weekend DIY Edition.
Above: The floors in Mjölk’s Renovated Scandi-Style Cabin on a Lake are also painted white, these in Benjamin Moore’s [product id="621644"]Cloud White[/product]. Note how some wear is part of the appeal.
Above: Justine’s 1807 cottage on Rock Harbor on the Cape has painted and splatter-painted floors throughout, like here, in the sunny master bedroom, where the wide-plank floors are a light shade of gray. Photograph from The Soulful Side of Old Cape Cod: Justine’s Family Cottage.
Above: Elsewhere on the Cape, Julie’s cottage bedrooms have white-painted pine floors. For more, see Cape Cod Summer Bedrooms Refreshed with Farrow & Ball Paint.
Above: More white-painted floors, which add brightness but don’t necessarily hide as much dirt, from A Tiny (but Glamorous) Seaside Cabin on the Riviera.
Above: A Cottage Reborn in Coastal Maine has hardwearing bathroom floors in a light gray.
Above: An unexpected shade that works: pumpkin-hued, splatter-painted floors in Justine’s yellow summer kitchen. See The Soulful Side of Old Cape Cod: Justine’s Family Cottage. For more on splatter-painted floors, see DIY: New England Splatter-Painted Floors.
Above: Designer C. S. Valentin preserved the original yellow-painted wood floors in the bedroom of a sea captain’s house in Bellport, Long Island. See A Colonial House in Bellport with Uncommon Style from French Designer C. S. Valentin.
Above: More yellow, these in a Hawaiian cottage. The paint color is Benjamin Moore’s [product id="953838"]Pale Moon[/product]. See Hawaiian Summer: A Charm-Filled Stone Carriage House on the Maui Coast, Restored.
Above: Green splatter-painted floors in Justine’s guest bedroom on the Cape. Photograph from The Soulful Side of Old Cape Cod: Justine’s Family Cottage.
Above: Narrow wooden stairs are painted in Benjamin Moore’s [product id="617813"]Martha’s Vineyard[/product] in An Artist’s Cottage in Truro, MA, Gets an Overhaul from a Boston Design Duo (Ikea Included).
Above: Dark gray floors add some drama in the 1900s cabins of a California lodge. For more, see Steal This Look: Manka’s Vintage Bath in Inverness, California.
Above: Simple gray-painted floors convey summertime in stylist Tiina Laakonen’s Hamptons home. See Rhapsody in Blue: A Finnish Stylist at Home in the Hamptons. Photograph by Matthew Williams for Remodelista; for more, see the Remodelista: A Manual for the Considered Home.
Above: Designed to hold up to foot traffic from summer guests: navy-painted floors in the living room of the Bellport house. See A Colonial House in Bellport with Uncommon Style from French Designer C. S. Valentin.
Above: In Justine’s cottage dining room, the black splatter-painted floors make sand harder to see, all part of the charm of a summer cottage. For more (and how to get the look), see DIY: New England Splatter-Painted Floors.
Above: And, in the Catskills farmhouse, Przystup and Linaberry transformed a cluttered attic into a summer bedroom. The main change? Painting the tired wood floors in [product id="621671"]Tricorn Black[/product]. For more of the project, see Before & After: An Airy Summer Bedroom in a Catskills Farmhouse, Transformed with Paint.For much more on the pros of painted floors, see:
- DIY: New England Splatter-Painted Floors
- Expert Advice: 4 Affordable Floor Finishes from Dirty Girl Construction
- Steal This Look: White-Painted Floors from Frugal Farmhouse
N.B.: This post has been updated; the original story ran on May 30, 2018.
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