When You Want to Go With Deep, Dark Green in Your Kitchen
See 11 ways to use this color, which can bring earthiness, elegance or a historic feel to the room
Dark or sludgy green is expected to be big in 2017 (even though Pantone’s Color of the Year is the vibrant acid Greenery). Here on Houzz, it’s a color we’re especially seeing in your kitchens. Here are 11 ways Houzzers have gone for seaweed, moss or juniper shades in their cooking spaces. If this color appeals to you, consider one of these approaches for your kitchen.
2. Tie in the floor. Patterned floor tiles indoors remain hugely popular, and these geometric ones are a nice twist on the more traditional encaustic tile designs that have led the way. They’re perfect for a fresh, modern kitchen like this.
For a more contemporary look, opt for details such as flat-fronted, handleless cabinets and a slightly less historic shade of green, as shown here. Instead of having a vibrant floor, you also could try hanging a large, framed abstract print or advertising poster in complementary colors to create a similar effect.
For a more contemporary look, opt for details such as flat-fronted, handleless cabinets and a slightly less historic shade of green, as shown here. Instead of having a vibrant floor, you also could try hanging a large, framed abstract print or advertising poster in complementary colors to create a similar effect.
3. Highlight the history. The historic look is another kitchen trend emerging on Houzz, and inky green is the perfect shade if you want to hark back to simpler times. Black and navy are two other popular options, but there’s something about British racing green that instantly conjures up the past.
Pair it with marble countertops or backsplashes to enhance that built-to-last feel, and choose your lighting with care. Vintage originals or thoughtful reproductions with a gentle industrial edge will top off the downstairs-at-Downton-Abbey effect.
Pair it with marble countertops or backsplashes to enhance that built-to-last feel, and choose your lighting with care. Vintage originals or thoughtful reproductions with a gentle industrial edge will top off the downstairs-at-Downton-Abbey effect.
4. Boost your room design with art. A touch more marble, some antique oil paintings, a bit more brass. This kitchen is an excellent example of historic styling. Art can enhance a kitchen and can cement references to any era you might be tapping into — whether Colonial, midcentury modern or anything in between.
5. Flirt with gray. Picking a shade that borders on deep gray is another way to use green in a modern space, as gray has such contemporary connotations.
There’s a convention in kitchen design when using two colors of cabinet that the lower units are dark, while the upper ones are the paler shade. Although there are no real wall units here, the painted wall fulfills the same function. And this reversal of the unspoken rule works because the kitchen is large and airy, with a high ceiling. In a small room, you may find that having a dark top section and a pale lower section gives you the feeling that the walls are falling in on you, so research carefully before committing to a color scheme.
There’s a convention in kitchen design when using two colors of cabinet that the lower units are dark, while the upper ones are the paler shade. Although there are no real wall units here, the painted wall fulfills the same function. And this reversal of the unspoken rule works because the kitchen is large and airy, with a high ceiling. In a small room, you may find that having a dark top section and a pale lower section gives you the feeling that the walls are falling in on you, so research carefully before committing to a color scheme.
6. Go for all over. Intensify your chosen green by painting all your woodwork in it too. Here, there are no door frames or cabinet doors in white or cream to break up the star color. This effect steers the kitchen into homey, rather than smart-classic territory, and it works wonderfully.
If you’re giving a 19th-century look a nod, as this kitchen does, the ideal lighting is a little industrial. Victorian kitchens like this one were busy, functional spaces, not the rooms we now socialize and eat in. Searching online for factory-style lighting is a good place to start.
If you’re giving a 19th-century look a nod, as this kitchen does, the ideal lighting is a little industrial. Victorian kitchens like this one were busy, functional spaces, not the rooms we now socialize and eat in. Searching online for factory-style lighting is a good place to start.
7. Stick to a strip. Perhaps you already have your kitchen in place and fancy just a refresh? Or maybe you’re not up for committing to green as your cabinet color? You can still let this mossy shade shine in your cooking space, and a green-tiled backsplash is one way to do it.
If you have wood accessories or features in a pale stain, consider sprucing them up with a new stain (always try out stains and colored wood oils on an out-of-sight patch first, regardless of the shade pictured on the label). The very dark brown seen here on the floor, shelf and support works because it’s a comparable saturation to the shade of green in the tiles.
If you have wood accessories or features in a pale stain, consider sprucing them up with a new stain (always try out stains and colored wood oils on an out-of-sight patch first, regardless of the shade pictured on the label). The very dark brown seen here on the floor, shelf and support works because it’s a comparable saturation to the shade of green in the tiles.
8. Play with a trio. Mix up a selection of greens to create depth in your design. Here, forest-green tiles mingle happily with a sage dining set and a pale pistachio wall.
To find compatible shades, try picking three from a paint color card. Try them out on sheets of paper, and tape them on different walls and surfaces around your kitchen to see how each looks in the light and how well they work together.
To find compatible shades, try picking three from a paint color card. Try them out on sheets of paper, and tape them on different walls and surfaces around your kitchen to see how each looks in the light and how well they work together.
9. Wow with a feature wall. Look around your kitchen space to see if you have a full-height wall you could paint seaweed green.
Here, the homeowners have an empty wall adjacent to their dining table. If you don’t, you could choose one floor-to-ceiling cabinet to turn green, and tie it into your design with a narrow backsplash in the same shade. You could use tiles for your backsplash if you can find ones in exactly the same green, or paint the backs of cut-to-size tempered glass to match.
Here, the homeowners have an empty wall adjacent to their dining table. If you don’t, you could choose one floor-to-ceiling cabinet to turn green, and tie it into your design with a narrow backsplash in the same shade. You could use tiles for your backsplash if you can find ones in exactly the same green, or paint the backs of cut-to-size tempered glass to match.
10. Nail the new Nordic look. If you love the clean lines of Scandinavian design but are ready for a variation on monochrome, then dark green is for you. This pale wood, white and inky-green kitchen is a bit like a Norwegian pine forest on a snowy day (with a little imagination).
Don’t be afraid to mix up your eras and design references, but do it with conviction. Taking style cues only from this historic-look island on legs, with its paneled Shaker-esque doors, and putting an industrial-style pendant in here would throw the rest of this pared-back contemporary space off course.
The trick is to look for another theme to follow: clean, boxy lines for example. Focus on this secondary style and you’ll more easily build a coherent space. Here, the historic style is updated by the concrete-look countertop and contemporary lighting above.
Don’t be afraid to mix up your eras and design references, but do it with conviction. Taking style cues only from this historic-look island on legs, with its paneled Shaker-esque doors, and putting an industrial-style pendant in here would throw the rest of this pared-back contemporary space off course.
The trick is to look for another theme to follow: clean, boxy lines for example. Focus on this secondary style and you’ll more easily build a coherent space. Here, the historic style is updated by the concrete-look countertop and contemporary lighting above.
11. Deviate from white in a small space. This kitchen trounces the so-called rule that small spaces should be pale in color. This luscious olive-sludge green features on every cabinet right up to the ceiling on three walls, and it doesn’t overwhelm the space at all.
However, there’s a little trick at play. The cabinets ahead and on the left are glass-fronted, with a pale shade inside and interior lighting. This little touch creates depth where solid green could have felt a touch top-heavy. The crisp white ceiling and pale marble “sandwich filling” also play a key part in providing visual harmony.
Tell us: Does your kitchen feature green? If not, would you like it to? Tell us in the Comments below.
More
Seeing Green: Some Kitchens Ditch White for Mother Nature’s Neutral
Cooking With Color: When to Use Green in the Kitchen
However, there’s a little trick at play. The cabinets ahead and on the left are glass-fronted, with a pale shade inside and interior lighting. This little touch creates depth where solid green could have felt a touch top-heavy. The crisp white ceiling and pale marble “sandwich filling” also play a key part in providing visual harmony.
Tell us: Does your kitchen feature green? If not, would you like it to? Tell us in the Comments below.
More
Seeing Green: Some Kitchens Ditch White for Mother Nature’s Neutral
Cooking With Color: When to Use Green in the Kitchen
If you take no other tips from this kitchen, be inspired by the power of small accessories in helping to build a color scheme.