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Sick of all-white kitchens?

Six ways to spice things up

The all-white kitchen, the reigning trophy room of the American home, is not going away anytime soon.

Yet change is afoot: Color is tiptoeing back into the kitchen.

A growing number of homeowners are looking to add some friendliness and warmth to their often cold, clinical, white-and-gray cooking spaces. Although the white kitchen has dominated the past decade, cobalt blue, pale pink and pumpkin are among the colors that are seeping into cabinets, islands, and even sinks and faucets.

“White is people's comfort zone,” says Elle H-Millard, industry relations manager for the National Kitchen and Bath Association. “White is all about safety and cleanliness. It's the feeling of purity we all want in the kitchen. White offers uncluttered, visual simplicity in a room where many of us spend a lot of our time.” Color, she adds, provides emotion and personality.

“We are seeing more color confidence as the economy does better,” says Wendy Mushow Werner, a Corian Design spokeswoman. “People are choosing more color, and the brighter and bolder colors are trending upward.”

Aqua turned up in the Clive Christian luxury kitchen in the Kips Bay Decorator Show House that opened recently in New York. The color was used in the marquetry on the range hood, on the leather lining of the cabinets and in the Le Creuset tea kettle.

According to a 2018 National Kitchen and Bath Association trends report, white and gray continue their dominance in kitchen color schemes, with 90 percent and 89 percent of respondents selecting them as “hot” choices. However, today “more people are willing to take a risk,” says H-Millard, “especially millennials.”

You can inject color with new mint cabinets or a lipstick-red stove. But it can also be done with salmon leather bar stools. Or color can come in a smaller, lower-risk detail, such as a yellow toaster or an emerald-green glass pendant lamp. You could simply paint your white walls grass green or peony pink.

Manufacturers are dishing up kitchen options in a new rainbow of hues. Here are some of our favorites.

Appliances

Want to make one big color statement? Get a major appliance in an unexpected hue, something fans of Aga and Lacanche luxury ranges have been doing for decades. The Italian company Smeg popularized Italian retro style in the 1990s with its pastel and candy-colored fridges, which are still sold today for about $2,000. And appliance manufacturer Big Chill has been offering color in the kitchen for 15 years. The color palette for its Retro line, which includes turquoise, Jadite Green and Pink Lemonade, is inspired by 1950s cars and kitchens. The starting price for a fridge is about $2,400.

“We typically see our appliances as a jolt of color in an otherwise fairly neutral kitchen,” says Orion Creamer, Big Chill co-founder. “People are nervous about putting an entire red kitchen in their house, but they may get a red refrigerator.”

For a kitchen using one color in multiple elements, he suggests sticking to green, blue or yellow. There are also 200 custom colors; you can even get a chartreuse dishwasher.

Counters

More and more designers are using two colors for kitchen surfaces, one for the island and one for the perimeter. Shades of white and gray are still the most dominant colors for kitchen counters, according to Werner. (Of the 181 Corian solid surface colors available, 33 are white, and 47 are gray; there are only two reds, eight greens and one orange.) But brighter colors are becoming more popular, in small doses. In small kitchens, Werner says, the same color can be used on several surfaces — perhaps some open shelving or a small cabinet door — to unify the space.

Color statements can make an appearance on counters or backsplashes as flecks of vibrant or reflective color, H-Millard says. Quartz and natural stone manufacturers are adding interest to their surfaces using glass chips or metallic flecks.

Cabinets

French blue lower cabinets anchor the white upper cabinets in the kitchen of a 1950s Maryland ranch house recently renovated by Washington, D.C., architect Chris Snowber of Hamilton Snowber. Designer Christie Leu of Christie Leu Interiors in Chevy Chase, Maryland, worked with Snowber's clients to pick a main kitchen color other than white.

“She liked orange and he liked green, but they both liked blue,” Leu says. They selected Greenfield cabinets in Juniper blue and a backsplash in a similar shade: Glazzio glass tile in Morning Mist.

If you want to paint your own cabinets, you'll want a hard, durable finish, says Leu. She suggests Advance by Benjamin Moore or Emerald Urethane Trim Enamel by Sherwin-Williams.

“Paint can transform a kitchen for a very small cost,” Leu says. Her advice to clients who want different colors on upper and lower cabinets is to always put the darker color on the bottom; otherwise, she says, it looks “top heavy.”

Taking a cue from the style or period of a house is a good way to choose a color that will fit your home's look. “A traditional house might use Williamsburg colors for the cabinetry,” Snowber says. “We've done that recently on several kitchens.”

Furniture

Washington designer Caryn Cramer was delighted that her Bethesda, Maryland, client did not want an all-white kitchen remodel. They decided to channel the look of a charming French country kitchen with Old World maple cabinets and an oak floor. The centerpiece of the space is a marble-topped oval wooden table that serves as a free-standing island. Its base is painted a traditional Provencal green (Parsley Snips by Benjamin Moore).

“An island is a good way to bring color into a kitchen, as it's easy to change out or repaint,” Cramer says. “I think this is a really happy green and a really happy space.”

The shade coordinates with the pale green BlueStar French door oven and gas range they chose to complete the room.

Sinks

A sink may be an unexpected place to add color, but it can turn into a focal point of a kitchen. Farmhouse sinks with their big apron fronts are one of the hottest looks at the moment, H-Millard says.

“We've been doing color in Europe for our sinks for about 20 years now,” says Akgun Seckiner, president of Bocchi USA. “Americans used to be only interested in biscuit and white.” But now fireclay farmhouse kitchen sinks by Bocchi ($650-$2,188) are available here in nine colors that include Sapphire Blue (but not yet in red and purple that are available in the brand's European line). The apron-front style lets the color show through more in the room.

The Elkay brand recently rolled out stainless farmhouse sinks with interchangeable apron fronts in several colors ($750-$1,149; aprons $250-$449). Using color on a sink, says H-Millard, gives it the ability to become a design element instead of just a fixture.

Faucets

Your choice of faucet finish used to be stainless, nickel, chrome or bronze. Now you can dress up your faucet with color.

The Essence Semi-Pro single-handle faucet by Grohe is available with interchangeable silicone hoses in nine colors including yellow, purple and green. (The faucet, $699-$899, is sold with a standard black hose; additional hoses are $85.) You can use a color to tie in a stand mixer or backsplash of the same hue. Or you can just make this faucet the only color in your kitchen. “Think of using a pink or red faucet,” says Noelle Giblin, Grohe's senior director of faucets. “It would put a real splash in an all-white kitchen.”

Designer Christine Elliott installed the Grohe Essence Semi-Pro single-handle faucet in this kitchen, with a blue hose that picks up the blue in the curtains. Courtesy of Christine Elliott
A white kitchen gets a jolt of color: The central countertop was done in Corian's Royal Red. Courtesy of Corian Design
Architect Chris Snowber and designer Christie Leu were inspired to do a blue kitchen in this midcentury modern renovation. There are brightly colored, gloss-finished cabinets and glass tiles in blue. Courtesy of Stacy Zarin Goldberg
The Bocchi Classico farmhouse sink in Sapphire Blue. Courtesy of Bocchi USA
This colorful Florida kitchen by Cheryl Kees Clendenon was a National Kitchen and Bath Association 2018 Design Competition Winner. Courtesy of Greg Riegler
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