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House Beautiful: The fine art of decor

Some people wear labradorite necklaces, pendants or rings.

Some people wear labradorite necklaces, pendants or rings.

But Julia and Mark Lucich have used the beautiful gemstone to top their kitchen island, and the result is spectacular 鈥 as if the Northern Lights were putting on a display in the middle of the room.

The stone鈥檚 name comes from Labrador, where it was first found in 1770, and it has since been discovered in Finland, Norway and Madagascar.

A kind of feldspar, it is famous for an optical effect called labradorescence, in which flashes of iridescent blue, gold or pale green shimmer like a peacock鈥檚 tail.

Some people say the stone holds magical powers and deepens clairvoyance, but the Lucichs seem a little too practical for all that. They just like the gleaming interplay of colour.

鈥淲e first saw a big slab of it long before we started building, at a warehouse in Burnaby, framed and hanging on a wall,鈥 said Mark. It stopped them in their tracks.

鈥淲e fell in love with it,鈥 said Julia, a painter known for her Party Animal series, which features animals in psychedelic colours. No wonder she wanted labradorite in her kitchen.

She and Mark also wanted a variety of counter heights, 鈥渂ecause my husband is six-foot-three and I鈥檓 lucky to be five-foot-one.鈥

Cabinet Works in Sidney fulfilled their requirements, which also included creating many open shelves for artwork, books and 鈥渘egative space.鈥 The owners were inspired in this by renowned British kitchen designer and architect Johnny Grey鈥檚 books on kitchen culture: 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 want your typical bank, on bank, on bank of cabinetry,鈥 said Julia.

Their planning included taking detailed measurements of cupboard and appliance doors so there is enough room to comfortably walk around the island even when every appliance, drawer and cupboard is wide open. No need to shimmy sideways.

They also made room in the island for a metal trolley that slides out and rolls around the kitchen as a mobile workstation or carving station at the dining table.

The east-facing house was built in 2012 and is set amid eight wilderness hectares on a Salt Spring hilltop. On a clear night it has views of Grouse Mountain 鈥 鈥渨hich looks like an airplane that never takes off,鈥 said Mark 鈥 and during the day they gaze upon Mount Baker.

The Lucichs first hired an architect to do their plans and explained they wanted a one-level house. When he returned with plans showing a master suite upstairs they parted company and switched to designer Jeff Savin, 鈥渨ho was helpful, a good listener and able to think outside the box,鈥 said Mark.

鈥淗e challenged many of our notions 鈥 made us rethink what a home is. It really isn鈥檛 as much about the building itself, as the comfort you feel within it.

鈥淲e鈥檝e had decks before and didn鈥檛 like them. They were just a pain in the butt because we don鈥檛 spend a lot of time outside,鈥 but Savin gave them a small one anyway.

鈥淚t turned out to be a nice surprise. It鈥檚 actually warm out there in the morning sun,鈥 said Mark, who added their first concern was to build a comfortable, easy-care home. To that end they used Hardie board siding and put on a metal roof.

Their previous home on Salt Spring was like a rabbit warren of different sized room and this time they wanted more open space, but they didn鈥檛 want ultra high ceilings again as the last home, 鈥渇elt like a blimp hanger,鈥 said Julia.

It is the first and last home they hope to build, said Mark, who did all the finishing work including all the tiling, which made it affordable.

鈥淪lab prices for labradorite are huge (about $85 a square foot) and then you have the added expense of cutting and polishing,鈥 so they decided to use tiles instead (about $17.50 a square foot).

Positioning the labradorite on the island was tricky because they wanted it to show off to best advantage, which meant Julia used her artist鈥檚 eye to choose the best location for every single piece. They used black granite tiles on the other counters.

Their flooring choice turned out to be an unwelcome surprise.

鈥淲e bought it at an auction and bid on something called honey maple, which we assumed was true maple, but that turned out to be the finish. The wood is actually birch, which is soft.鈥

Mike said it was unfortunate as they wanted a low maintenance, character floor, and they plan to stay there as long as they can. But they are living with it.

Another difficulty was the fact that Julia, while an artist, freely admits she is 鈥渟patially鈥 challenged: 鈥淚 can appreciate a footprint, but when it comes to volume or three dimensions. No.鈥

Knowing she had trouble envisioning the spaces, Mark used cardboard to create mockups in the kitchen, showing precisely where each cabinet, appliance, island and more would go and how it would fill the space.

Julia chose a warm brick red shade for several feature walls in the kitchen, and all the others are painted in a complex neutral called brown alpaca, which tends to look different on every surface and is a great backdrop for art.

What made the two Americans decide to settle on the island? A sneeze.

They couple moved here 15 years ago from Oregon because of Julia鈥檚 hay fever. It turned out the Willamette Valley where they were living for some time, had gradually become the world鈥檚 major producer of turf grass seed and cool season forage, which means it is now notoriously uncomfortable for allergy sufferers.

They wanted to stay in the Pacific Northwest 鈥 鈥淚t鈥檚 so different from everywhere else in sa国际传媒 and the U.S., it could be its own country,鈥 she said 鈥 and started looking north of the border.

They first visited Williams Lake in the Cariboo, but after digging their realtor out of a snow bank they turned south and toured the sunshine coast, then Gabriola, Denman and Quadra islands.

One day, they were staying at a B and B in Cobble Hill and someone chanced to ask if they had seen Salt Spring. They located a realtor who guided them round the island and were impressed with the landscape as well as the number of artists living there.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 like the heat, and Mark doesn鈥檛 like the cold, so that automatically made us comfortable closer to the water. And Salt Spring has a high school, which meant our children would not have to commute by boat to get an education.鈥