8 Elements of a Modern Kitchen
Frameless cabinets, horizontal lines and lack of ornamentation top the list of what defines modern kitchen style
Rebekah Zaveloff
February 21, 2012
It can be tough to distinguish between modern and contemporary, and for good reason. Many spaces are both modern and contemporary, and people often use the terms interchangeably, but there are differences in look and terminology. “Contemporary” typically means of the moment or current, the design of right now. “Modern” refers to a specific design style from the early to mid 20th century that broke with the traditional styles of the days before the Industrial Revolution.
“Modern” can be a tricky term because sometimes it’s used to describe something that’s the opposite of traditional, which varies depending on the time period. The decision of women in the 1920s to swap corsets for flapper dresses was modern at the time, but today those clothes are antiques.
When I think of modern kitchen designs, I think of frameless cabinets, sleek and simple hardware, strong horizontal lines and a lack of ornamentation, with the natural beauty of the materials shining through.
More kitchen styles:
Classic | Traditional | Transitional | Contemporary | Eclectic | Cottage | Craftsman | Mediterranean
“Modern” can be a tricky term because sometimes it’s used to describe something that’s the opposite of traditional, which varies depending on the time period. The decision of women in the 1920s to swap corsets for flapper dresses was modern at the time, but today those clothes are antiques.
When I think of modern kitchen designs, I think of frameless cabinets, sleek and simple hardware, strong horizontal lines and a lack of ornamentation, with the natural beauty of the materials shining through.
More kitchen styles:
Classic | Traditional | Transitional | Contemporary | Eclectic | Cottage | Craftsman | Mediterranean
1. Flat-panel door style. This is sometimes referred to as a slab-door style and is a signature element of modern kitchen design. You might see a modern kitchen using a Shaker door style, but that often falls into transitional rather than modern — which is not to say it can't be used; it's just not a purist's perspective.
2. Frameless, full-overlay cabinet construction. A bunch of terms are thrown around to describe this type of cabinet construction: frameless, Euro frameless, overlay, full overlay. They all mean the same thing, that the door overlays the cabinet box. This style is the most often used in modern kitchens because it's sleeker than a flush-inset cabinet, which is often associated with more traditional kitchen, cabinet and furniture design.
2. Frameless, full-overlay cabinet construction. A bunch of terms are thrown around to describe this type of cabinet construction: frameless, Euro frameless, overlay, full overlay. They all mean the same thing, that the door overlays the cabinet box. This style is the most often used in modern kitchens because it's sleeker than a flush-inset cabinet, which is often associated with more traditional kitchen, cabinet and furniture design.
In a true frameless cabinet you won't see a face frame at all, and you'll get consistent spacing between all the doors and drawers, even between two cabinets. In what's called a framed overlay, you will still have a face frame and varying space between doors and cabinets.
Diagram courtesy of Kitchens Made New
Diagram courtesy of Kitchens Made New
When the doors are closed on a frameless cabinet, you can't see the frame at all except for about a ⅛-inch shadow line between cabinets.
3. Sleek and simple hardware. In modern kitchens you’ll most often see C-channel hardware that’s integrated into the cabinet, as well as tubular pulls or flat linear pulls. Lots of times the horizontal lines of the cabinets will be accentuated by cabinet hardware running the full length of the drawers and doors.
4. Lack of ornamentation. Always a signature of modern, this is often where contemporary and modern stop being similar. Whereas you might see patterned tile shapes or multiple materials with texture, color and patina in a contemporary kitchen, you won’t see much of that in a modern kitchen. Flat-panel door styles and sleek hardware are joined here by a simple full-height glass backsplash and countertops without any pattern or veining.
5. Reliance on the beauty of natural materials. It's not to say that modern kitchens can't have a little bit of ornamentation, but when they do, they get it from the natural characteristics in a material, such as the horizontal grain of oak when it's rift cut or the natural beauty and veining of marble.
The grain of the walnut on this island is all this modern kitchen needs in terms of ornamentation.
6. Emphasis on horizontal lines. You might not notice at first, but many modern kitchens share a tendency toward the horizontal: long, wide lines, stacks of drawer cabinets lined in a row, hardware set long and horizontal to accentuate the lines of the drawers. In this kitchen the floating panel of the back wall and the cutout accentuate the horizontal theme.
These cabinets have horizontal grooves in addition to the grain being horizontal on all the cabinet fronts. In a traditional kitchen the grain might be run vertically on doors or center panels with a vertical orientation.
In this kitchen the island itself makes a strong horizontal statement.
In this kitchen the tile's natural grain is like rift-cut wood, and the tiles themselves are set and stacked on a horizontal grid.
Even in a kitchen that skews toward transitional, a standard 3-by-6 Cararra marble set in a stacked pattern rather than a brick pattern can make it more modern.
7. Consistency in style of accent pieces. Accents like lighting, tables, chairs and bar stools all have to be considered when designing a kitchen. In a modern kitchen these elements will stay consistent rather than deviate like you’d see in an eclectic kitchen. The pieces here show simple, clean lines and lack of ornamentation.
Sleek bar stools and pendant lights are consistent with modern style, but this modern kitchen is in a Victorian home complete with leaded glass windows and arches with columns. There’s no rule that says the architecture and the kitchen have to both be modern — hundreds of century-old apartments and farmhouses with modern kitchens in Italy, France and Spain can attest to that.
There's nothing to say that color can't be introduced into a modern kitchen, whether it's in the accents or the cabinets.
8. Industrial elements. There’s something about the unadorned elements of industrial details that are instantly modern. This natural and untreated concrete wall has a visual interest and patina all its own and is as interesting as patterned wallpaper for the modernist. What looks like epoxy-painted concrete floors and the complete lack of ornamentation on the cabinets complete the look of this modern kitchen.
Find a concrete pro to get these floors
In this series:
How to Remodel Your Kitchen
Find Your Kitchen Style
Find a concrete pro to get these floors
In this series:
How to Remodel Your Kitchen
Find Your Kitchen Style
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Great article with many thoughful ideas. Thanks for your expertise, Rebecca! We also notice that modern kitchens tend to have less wall cabinets than traditional. Wall cabinets also have lift up doors that add to the horizontal lines of the modern kitchen.
I have seen theses beautiful cabi!nets in purple and they are gorgeous! I do love the blue kitchen I think it was the first and the gray or mauve kitchen!
I want modern efficiency, function, and beauty. Modern comes closest. I want wall mounted faucets to avoid the messy build up behind a faucet. I want cabinets and countertops which are easily cleaned and do not show every little thing or fingerprints. I want sliding doors on wall cabinets and a stove backsplash that is removable for easy cleaning. And GLEAM.