Rustic Wine Cabinets

199 Ideas by Chloe Hughes

Even if you live in the city ,sometimes a tastes of the country is all you need to disconnect from the hustle and bustle. Rustic wine cabinets will give you just that sensation of being out in the sticks out of cell service with your nearest and dearest enjoying nature. Take a look and see what we mean in this extensive collection.

Rustic wine table

The rustic wine cabinet in a beautiful finish is a perfect combination of solid wood construction and beautiful details. Practical drawers, a bottle of wine and a solid countertop that will serve you when serving.

Madison mccord interiors rustic wine cabinet livermore ca united

Madison McCord Interiors - Rustic WIne Cabinet - Livermore, CA, United ...

Refined & Rustic Rivington Wine Cabinet

Refined & Rustic Rivington Wine Cabinet

Crafted from weathered wood, this wine cabinet with two drawers and a side door constitutes a functional proposition for all wine enthusiasts. Includes one glass rack and three bottom racks, which can comprise twelve bottles.

Floor Wine Cabinet

Floor Wine Cabinet

Rustic wine cabinet that comes in an antique-inspired distressed look. The cabinet is also super tall, giving you space for your vintage wine collection. It’s constructed from metal so it should last for years plus you also get beautiful crown moldings at the top for excellent style.

Rustic wine storage

Practical rustic buffet with wine cabinets. It includes two large compartments, space for 15 wine bottles and two storage drawers with metal hardware. Durable wooden construction represents a barn style.

Jackson 7 Bottle Wine Cabinet

Jackson 7 Bottle Wine Cabinet

Rustic wine cabinets

Stylish cabinet with double glass doors and 2 drawers arranged horizontally. It is mounted on wooden frame. Application in all kinds of interiors according to taste and need.

Rustic Wine Cabinets

Buying Guide

Rustic wine cabinets come in all sorts and sizes. Rustic means a lot of different things. It can mean down-home, making-do kinds of carpentry, or it can mean a landed gentry retreat in the country. There are, of course, a wide range of styles in between these two extremes. Therefore, a wine cabinet could be a simple shelf, a nest of pigeon holes for bottles, or it could mean a wine dispensary worthy of a Scottish Laird in his remote retreat. Here are a few ideas for wine cabinets.

The Simple Kitchen Shelf

A neat rack that is just the right size for a wine bottle or six, with a hanger beneath it for stemware can be mounted on the wall in a small kitchen or in a modest den. The wine placed on it will reflect the owner’s taste in vintages, and the stemware might range from department store plastic to second best-inherited glassware. (The best glassware is probably put away in a cabinet to avoid breakage.) Add a proper corkscrew, and you are ready to entertain.

Distressed Wood Cabinets

A cabinet made of distressed wood can certainly give that rustic feel to your kitchen or den. Barn wood has been a popular building material for some years now but finding a barn that is fair game for scavenging wood is quite a trick these days. Modern barns are often made of metal because of its increased durability. You can easily distress an unfinished cabinet or milled lumber to create the same effect without the side order of wondering just what kinds of things helped distress that barn wood. Or you can purchase lovely cabinets that look as if they were made from that proverbial old barn but were crafted by skilled carpenters.

Antique or Shabby Chic Cabinets

If you are skilled at searching through antique shops or vintage furniture stores, you might be fortunate enough to come across a cabinet with chipped paint and battered surface. Such cabinets look as if they’ve been hauled across the plains and then passed through the hands of several generations of rough children. Their real provenance might be a little different.

It is easy to create that shabby chic look using an unfinished wine cabinet. First paint prime the cabinet with a sealer. Next, paint it with a dark color. Red or green will do nicely. Let it dry, and paint it again with a different color. Repeat for four or five layers of paint, ending with the color you want to keep. Next, sand the corners and some of the detailing of the cabinet until the under coats of paint begin to show through. You could even ding it gently with a hammer, or give it a rasp or two with a wire brush. The idea is to make it look as if it is aged. You then have the advantage of having the looks of an antique without worrying about whether a child or pet might nibble lead-based paint off your cabinet.