This Kitchen Got the Dreamiest Coastal Makeover Inspired by Martha’s Vineyard

Cullen OrmondHouse Tours Editor
Cullen OrmondHouse Tours Editor
I write about house tours (but I love a good kitchen and kids' room article). My work can be found across AT Media, including The Kitchn and Cubby. I’ve been writing about home-related topics for nearly five years and love seeing how people make their homes unique.
published Nov 7, 2025
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Gutted kitchen before renovation.

When Brittany Butler and Rachel Kwaw of the New Orleans and Atlanta-based firm, B. Noelle Design, began working on a Georgia client’s home, they had to build it from the ground up — literally. “After nearly three decades of building her dream house, she had a house fire that cost her almost everything,” the designers explain. 

Thanks to Butler and Kwaw, the kitchen, specifically, got the most charming update. Before the fire in 2023, the kitchen had last been updated in 1993, and the designers described it as “outdated with a peninsula and laminate cabinets.” 

Credit: Marc Mauldin

The duo had to approach the renovation with sensitivity and tact. “We noted, empathized, and revisited the highlights,” they share. The designers drew inspiration from happy times, such as the client’s annual visits to Martha’s Vineyard, for the design of the new kitchen. 

The designers suggested adding more windows to flood the room with natural light, and the client loved the idea. After getting her approval, or as the designers put it, “her smile,” they moved forward with adding colors inspired by Martha’s Vineyard.

Credit: Marc Mauldin

The kitchen walls were coated with Sherwin-Williams’ Fleur de Sel, a dreamy green-tinted white. The butler’s pantry walls were painted with Sherwin-Williams’ Sea Salt, a gorgeous seafoam green; the cabinets were painted Sherwin-Williams’ Upward, a soft gray-blue; and Wall Blush’s Tally wallpaper adorns the ceiling. The counters are even a gorgeous blue calcite. 

Credit: Marc Mauldin

Sentimental pieces, like artwork restored from the fire, dot the walls of the kitchen and butler’s pantry. And because the room was built as a “forever kitchen,” the designers added easily-accessible storage options like minimal upper cabinets and built-in storage.

The entire kitchen renovation took around three and a half months and approximately $50,000 to complete from start to finish. 

Credit: Marc Mauldin