There's nothing more that I love than a good floating shelf- especially one with rustic barn wood. When designing our kitchen, I envisioned the back corner to encompass floating shelving. I love that you can display pretty dishes, artwork, utensils, etc. on open shelving.To the left of the sink, we have a pot holder that holds all of our cast iron skillets. To the right of the sink, we have an open corner that was always meant for floating shelving. Originally, I had dreamt of the floating shelf being one large board that wrapped around the corner and spanned from window to window. It wasn't until we got our rustic barn wood that I started to think about different design options. A few months ago, I brought these SUPER large authentic bread boards home from our shoppe. I fell in love with them and they felt very European to me. I stuck them against the wall to hide the electrical outlet and they became a must-have to this wall. The thought of losing this spot for the bread boards (if we wrapped the floating shelving around that corner) made me bummed. We have 9' ceilings and having these incredibly large bread boards against that wall just felt right. SO, after multiple thoughts of having two shelves vs. one AND having wrap around shelving vs. one single shelf- we opted for one single shelf for now to see how we like the floating shelf in this space. The big and burning question of the week was HOW DID WE DO THIS? Well friends, it wasn't hard! We started by taking these 6