Jennifer June creates kitchens that are purpose-built, great-looking, and made to last. And those are but a few of the reasons to admire what she does. June is both an interior designer and a cabinetmaker, a useful if uncommon combination. She’s also a teacher at Parsons School of Design, her alma mater—she co-leads the MFA Interior Design program’s Circular Interiors Studio, which focuses on extending the life cycle and reusability of objects.
In upstate New York, where June lives, she runs Loose Parts, her furniture company, which recently introduced the Workshop Kitchen, an adaptable, modular system of freestanding, solid-wood cabinets. “Working in interiors, you see the amount of waste that is generated in home renovations,” she says. “Kitchens in particular are problematic, primarily because the site-built systems and materials commonly used—MDF, laminates, heavily glued composites—are hard to disassemble without destroying them. I wanted to rethink the kitchen as a series of discrete furniture pieces that can move between homes and be repaired over time.”
Photography by Black & Steil, unless noted, all courtesy of Loose Parts (@loose_parts).
Jennifer’s Own Workshop Kitchen

Their kitchen sits in place of the original and has cabinets of red maple. June selected their Fisher & Paykel 30-inch Induction Range, partly because it has adjustable knobs instead of digital settings—and recommends it and their Fisher & Paykel panel-ready 24-inch Series 9 Integrated Refrigerator Freezer. The wall lamp is a reissue of ‘s Applique à Volet Pivotant purchased secondhand from Somerset House, one of her go-to sources for vintage modern design.

Out of school, she had her own wallpaper line, which led to an interest in interiors—and her Parsons masters degrees in interior and lighting design. It was during the pandemic, while she and Tim were holed up in his family cabin in Oregon. that she devoted herself to fully learning carpentry: her late father-in-law was a builder and she had access to his workshop and all of his tools. She now has her own fully kitted out studio in Catskill, New York.

June uses hardwoods from “responsibly managed American forests, primarily in the Northeast and Appalachian corridor” and works with a family-owned mill in operation for four generations. “Wood wears in, not out,” she says.

Hello Human Office Kitchen



Loose Parts Showroom

Shown here, a compact, L-shaped kitchen with an old cast-iron sink atop a cherry frame and black oxide hardware. The faucet is by Kraus. The Prong Fruit Bowl and Uni Wall Hook are by Brooklyn ceramic artist Virgina Sin. June found the grograin skirting fabric at NYC’s B & J Fabrics. Photograph by Jennifer June.

Details


Loose Parts Workshop

She’ll be hosting an open house in her showroom (388 Main St, Catskill, NY) during Upstate Art Weekend, June 26-29 2026.
Some more adaptable kitchen designs:
- 6 Low-Impact Deconstructed Kitchens
- 8 Companies Designing Modular Kitchen Components
- Trend Alert: Sideboard as Kitchen
- 10 Easy Pieces: All-in-One Kitchen Workstations
- The Unfitted Kitchen: 14 Deconstructed Spaces


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