Did you know that painting those cabs will cost you in the neighborhood of 8-10K. yes, for a pro to do it correctly, that's how much it would run you. You could do a cheap painter for maybe 3K, but within months it will peel and chip. Now add on a new countertop at about 4K, w/tile splash (I wouldn't run the granite up the back) and you're in the 15K region.
I had my wood cabs refaced and painted. it was above 10K. (I had some other things done too)
Renters aren't going to be as careful w/painted cabinets. White needs to be cleaned often.
Or, leave the wood cabs as is, maybe change the hardware to pulls instead of knobs.
This is similar style to yours, but in oak. here's the before
and the after. Much better, no?
You could sell your white appliances on craigslist or something and look for black or SS replacements on the same site. sometimes you find great deals. (and it's a tax writeoff)
I'd spend the money on a nice granite and a simple subway tile backsplash.
The inspo pics you're showing are rather dated looking w/that particular granite up the back. I wouldn't do either of those.
River White Granite would be nice, or a Virginia Mist in a honed finish.
here's the subway w/a a slightly diff granite. notice how the glass in the cab doors really upgrades the look
here's the honed black granite. Soapstone is another option,
Or you could do the quartz that looks like soapstone.
Silestone Eternal charcoal. (I have this one in the gray in my kitchen)
wood cabs, white quartz, white subway tile, a nice blue/gray accent.
If you still want to upgrade and paint, contact a local cabinet guy or kitchen company (not home depot or lowes) and find out the cost to paint and reface the doors. to get all new doors/drawers for mine was only another 2K.
You could do something like this, which fits the style of your home.
You have plenty of storage, so remove the cab above the stove and do a nice vent hood to help open things up.
a few doors w/glass, or even some open shelving would also work.
Beadboard like this as a backsplash is perfect for your home, and you can DIY it on the cheap
lOok at pics of coffee bars so you can maximize the space you have
For your bathroom, either leave it, or do a smaller vanity w/storage. people want places to put things. a pedastal sink isn't going to be any better than what you have.
you could sell your two green items and buy white. have the tub epoxy coated (but just know it's only good for 3-4 years before it peels and chips)
look at period style bathrooms like yours to get some other ideas
you could do a black console or vanity.
go vintage or modern.
I like the black ceiling accent and window trim
here's a pic of the pedestal sink in white
Q
Sink Skirt
Q