Hardware and fixtures are the jewelry of a kitchen — small in size, large in impact. They're the details your hand touches and your eye catches, and the cheapest way to make a kitchen look custom and finished. In a lake house they also have to survive the damp and heavy seasonal use. Here's how I choose hardware and fixtures for a lake kitchen so they look great and hold up.
Treat Them as Jewelry
The mindset shift is to treat hardware and fixtures as the jewelry of the kitchen, not an afterthought. They finish the room the way the right accessories finish an outfit, and swapping dull hardware for the right pieces transforms how custom and considered a kitchen looks — especially on refreshed or painted cabinets. For relatively little money, good hardware reads as a thoughtful, designed detail. I never let the jewelry be the thing that's skimped on.
Warm Metals for the Lake
For a lake kitchen, I reach for warm metals — brass above all — because they complement the breezy whites, lake blues, and warm woods so beautifully. Warm metal adds a touch of timeless character and warmth that suits the lake palette, where cool chrome can feel a little clinical. Brass and other warm finishes feel both classic and inviting in a lake house, tying the breezy look together. It's a perennial favourite of mine for exactly that reason.
Durability Against the Damp
A lake house is humid and seasonal, so hardware and fixtures have to resist tarnishing and corrosion through damp conditions and heavy use. I choose quality pieces with durable finishes — including living finishes that age gracefully rather than degrade — because cheap finishes can corrode or wear in a hardworking, humid kitchen. The finish has to be as tough as it is good-looking. Spending a little more on quality hardware that survives the lake's conditions pays off in the long run.
The Faucet Earns Its Spend
The faucet is used constantly by a summer crowd and is a focal point at the sink, so it's worth real money. I choose a durable, quality faucet with a corrosion-resistant finish in a timeless style — a classic bridge or gooseneck in warm brass or an enduring finish suits a lake house beautifully. Build quality matters as much as looks, since a lake faucet is worked hard and must handle the seasonal climate. It's one fixture I never cut corners on.
Coordinate the Finishes
The detail that makes a kitchen feel truly finished is coordinating the metal finishes across hardware, faucet, and lighting so they share a warm, cohesive story. A consistent warm-metal thread — brass hardware, brass faucet, brass-toned light fixtures — ties the whole kitchen together and reads as intentional and designed. Mismatched, random finishes read as accidental. I plan the metals as a coordinated family, which is one of the simplest ways to make a lake kitchen look custom.
Don't Forget the Lighting Metals
Lighting is part of the metal story too. The finishes on the sconces and pendants should coordinate with the hardware and faucet, all in the same warm family, so the whole kitchen feels cohesive. A warm-brass sconce echoing brass hardware and a brass faucet ties the room together at every level. I always include the lighting metals in the coordination, because lighting is one of the most visible metal elements in the kitchen, glowing right at eye level.
Quality Where You Touch It
I spend on the pieces you physically touch and use — the faucet, the most-used pulls, the hardware your hand lands on daily — because that's where quality is felt and cheapness shows. A lake kitchen sees a lot of hands, so the touch-points have to feel solid and work smoothly. Investing in quality where it's touched, and economising on the rest, is how I get a lake kitchen that feels custom without a custom budget. The hands-on details are the ones that matter most.
The Finishing Touch
Treated as jewelry, chosen in warm durable metals, built to survive the damp, anchored by a quality faucet, and coordinated across hardware, faucet, and lighting — that's how I choose hardware and fixtures for a lake house kitchen. They're the finishing touches that make the whole breezy room feel designed and custom, for relatively little money. Of all the details in a lake kitchen, the jewelry is the one that delivers the most polish per dollar, so I always get it right.
Lighting in this kitchen: warm wall sconces and swing-arm wall sconces
My friend Michelle at The Wharton House taught me to treat hardware as jewelry, not an afterthought — it's the cheapest way to make a kitchen look custom, in a historic home or a lake house alike.


