Kitchen of the Week: Latte-Colored Cabinets Perk Up an L-Shape
A designer helps a couple update and lighten their kitchen without going the all-white route
After. The kitchen now includes traditional framed cabinets with plywood box construction and painted maple doors. The semicustom cabinets go all the way to the ceiling to enhance the height of the room and eliminate the dust-collecting storage area.
A lovely latte color brightens the room while maintaining warmth. “We wanted to lighten things up without going too bright,” designer Pamela Lehman says. “It’s warm and gives you a bit of color without going over the top.” They kept the walls the same cream color as before.
Lehman replaced the swinging door with a wider, arched opening that improves flow between the kitchen and dining room. A new, heftier island features a honed white Calacatta Michelangelo marble top.
Cabinets: Crestwood in Latte finish, Dura Supreme Cabinetry; cabinet pulls: transitional brushed nickel, Richelieu Hardware; see more cabinet hardware options
A lovely latte color brightens the room while maintaining warmth. “We wanted to lighten things up without going too bright,” designer Pamela Lehman says. “It’s warm and gives you a bit of color without going over the top.” They kept the walls the same cream color as before.
Lehman replaced the swinging door with a wider, arched opening that improves flow between the kitchen and dining room. A new, heftier island features a honed white Calacatta Michelangelo marble top.
Cabinets: Crestwood in Latte finish, Dura Supreme Cabinetry; cabinet pulls: transitional brushed nickel, Richelieu Hardware; see more cabinet hardware options
After. The new marble counters join a marble backsplash and new appliances for an elegant, updated look. Joan requested the marble shelf to keep cooking oils and spices nearby and to break up the expanse of material. “We don’t have a vent hood up there, so I wanted to have something so it just doesn’t look like a big, blank piece of marble there,” she says. The cooktop includes a downdraft vent.
After. The couple made better use of the desk area by removing the peninsula and adding a hutch. Joan now stores her purse in a rollout drawer in the hutch so it’s not left out in the open. “In every picture we had from the holidays, like Christmas, you would see my purse in the photo,” Joan says. “It just looked messy.”
The linen color of the hutch helps distinguish it from the kitchen cabinets. A stylish backsplash with random offset field tiles with a custom oyster gray grout adds pattern and texture.
Hutch cabinets in Linen White: Dura Supreme Cabinetry; polished nickel pulls: Atlas Homewares; wine refrigerator: True Residential; accent wall paint: Chocolate Velvet, Benjamin Moore; backsplash tile: Elios-Marks Maori Deco in Plaster, Tileshop
The linen color of the hutch helps distinguish it from the kitchen cabinets. A stylish backsplash with random offset field tiles with a custom oyster gray grout adds pattern and texture.
Hutch cabinets in Linen White: Dura Supreme Cabinetry; polished nickel pulls: Atlas Homewares; wine refrigerator: True Residential; accent wall paint: Chocolate Velvet, Benjamin Moore; backsplash tile: Elios-Marks Maori Deco in Plaster, Tileshop
After. The narrow door to the dining room was replaced, the short peninsula that separated the kitchen and family room was removed, the location of the wall ovens was changed and the former desk area was converted into an attractive hutch. These key changes and more helped create a brighter, user-friendly space with transitional style.
“The kitchen and family room look so much bigger without that peninsula,” Joan says. “I just feel much better and happy in there now.”
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“The kitchen and family room look so much bigger without that peninsula,” Joan says. “I just feel much better and happy in there now.”
More
Trending Now: 11 Popular Kitchens That Rock Not-White Cabinets
5 Trade-Offs to Consider When Remodeling Your Kitchen
See more Kitchens of the Week
Other Resources on Houzz
Find a kitchen designer
Get ideas and inspiration
Browse kitchen products
Kitchen of the Week
Who lives here: Larry and Joan Porter
Size: About 338 square feet (31 square meters)
Location: Diablo, California
Designer: Pamela Lehman of Kitchens of Diablo
Larry and Joan Porter of the San Francisco East Bay community of Diablo thought the existing footprint of their L-shaped kitchen was fine, but they wanted to update appliances, have more functional storage and make the space feel more light, airy and welcoming.