Kitchen colour coordination problem..
carolineboff
4 years ago
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Comments (9)
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How to co-ordinate kitchen worktops and wooden flooring
Comments (2)Hello Anne, Honed would be my suggestion as I just love the finish. Get a sample or two and see what you think. With wood why not find a light whitish granite that has a wood colour grain.. That way the two compliment. You can further compliment with some wooden chopping boards and a marble piece or two... Cheese board and a pestle and mortar for example.. Both really useful pieces and lovely.. Anthropologie has the pestle and mortar and Habitat a cheese board although I use it for toast and anything that isn't acidic.. :))...See Moreflooring - what colour to coordinate with parquet teak ?
Comments (3)If it's North facing and you like the cool Wevet/Ammonite colours I would avoid a cold floor. Huge matt tiles such as these from Mandarin Stone (Mortar Sand or Mortar Putty) could work. Make sure there is a bit if warmth to the undertone as North facing rooms are difficult. https://www.mandarinstone.com/product/mortar-putty-porcelain/...See Morekitchen corner problem
Comments (15)Thanks all. The colour roundthe corner is a good idea. Wine rack is a no no . !possibly some base shelving or vertical rack ..with alight colour and dark colour combo may tie it all up but a bit contrived .or justa light colour door. .And then I would maybe have dark short wall cupboards instead of shelves to span between wall and tall units..thinking the grey stoneworktop will bring it all together .....See MoreOpen plan kitchen problem
Comments (45)Sorry Mat not sure if I follow. Are you having storage put in by the door? There is no storage labelled on your plans. If so, then visually speaking, the room starts from where the floor starts not from where the wall behind the cabinets starts. So if you have the same distance from both sides i.e. from right wall and from the left cabinet, it will still look symmetrical. Do you see how the room starts from the door of the cabinet and not from the splash back behind the sink? Here the column between the doors looks the same size as the wall next to the cabinets, whereas in reality the wall is at least 60cm wider. Again here the door appears to be in the centre of the room but in reality the wall on the left hand side is much wider because it carries on behind the cabinets. The designer has cleverly placed a T.V. there to stop the eye from noticing the rest of the wall. The same effect can be achieved with floor to ceiling cabinets. Was that what you were asking about or have I gone way off?...See Morecarolineboff
4 years agoJuliet Docherty
4 years agolast modified: 4 years agoPatrina
4 years agocarolineboff
4 years ago
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