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| Use blocks of color. This is the most classic way of mixing finishes. The perimeter cabinets are one color and the island is another color. The unexpected in this kitchen is the freestanding tall cabinet. Staining it an entirely different tone than the island or the floors makes it feel like it was a found piece even though it could have been built by the cabinetmaker at the same time as all the other cabinets. It's common in kitchen remodels for everything to be brand-spanking new. Mixing finishes helps to tone down the "newness" of it all and give the space a more collected-over-time feel. |
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by SKD STUDIOS
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| Consider your wood flooring. Many times people buy natural wood finishes in all their furniture, forgetting about how much wood there already is in the floors. If the floor in this kitchen had been stained a dark, matching brown tone, all those beautiful cabinets and countertops would get lost against it. The golden tone of the floor serves to create contrast and adds a third color layer. This kitchen also throws an unexpected curve: The sink base cabinets become their own element, painted white in a run of dark stained cabinetry. |
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| Add one token wood piece. If your kitchen doesn't have wood floors, you may find yourself needing to add a bit of natural wood tone to keep it from feeling cold. This wonderful freestanding dish cabinet could have been found on a lucky antiquing trip or built by the cabinetmaker to look as if it were. |
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by knowles ps
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| Let natural breaks such as doors become a transition for a new finish or color. Take advantage of that door to the mudroom or laundry room that splits up your kitchen walls. Paint one wall a completely different color altogether. I love how the range wall in this kitchen has two-tone cabinet doors, while the island and floors are natural wood, but still not perfectly matched. The wall of tall cabinets being painted a blue-gray is an unexpected and pleasant surprise. |
| Use your stained wood casing as a jumping off point. My personal preference is to never put stained wood cabinets adjacent to stained wood casing. The contrast that a painted wood cabinet offers just can't be beat. I'm not a fan of the cabinets-matching-the-trim sort of thing. For whatever reason, that's just one of my quirks. I love the layered vintage look of the sage greens, chocolate browns and natural wood casing in this kitchen. The wood floors tie back to the window and door casing and complete the circle for me. |
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| This home's existing window and door casing was such a showstopper that we couldn't help but have it milled to match in the kitchen. Occasionally in older homes you'll see the casing in the kitchen and bathrooms painted white, and this often solves many dilemmas when picking finishes, but in this home it just wasn't an option. There are so many windows in the kitchen and no wall cabinets on the window wall that the wood casing is almost a surrogate for wood cabinets. Again, the casing ties back to the flooring, completing the circle. |
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| Intersperse painted and stained throughout. If the color blocking approach isn't doing it for you, and the contrasting wall/base cabinet approach isn't doing it for you either, mixing it up throughout might be a good option. Typically this approach is better suited to modern kitchens. In fact, these kitchens were inspired by mid-century modern furniture pieces. Splashes of natural wood doors are mixed in with a white kitchen, but as you'll notice, all the frames are white to keep the continuity. |
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| In this kitchen, rather than doing a different door finish, stained wood panels and fillers throughout the white cabinetry perimeter wall tie back to the island color. For homeowners afraid of an all-white or all-wood kitchen, this is a terrific compromise.
More: How to Set Up Your Kitchen High-Contrast Kitchens for Every Style 12 Great Ideas for Organizing Your Kitchen Choosing a Backsplash: What's Your Personality Type? |
I don't how you feel about the following, Rebekah, but I'd like to share one bit of advice I found works wonders when mixing different colours of wood:
Add some black to the room.
I don't know why, but a separate black element makes the different wood colours appear complementary.
Beautiful examples, here, Rebekah - Thank you.
(Now, back to repurposing this old dresser into a kitchen island.
When the island is finished, there will be all-night Scrabble and Monopoly parties, with the liquor cabinet within reach... )