The Riverside Press-Enterprise

COOKING WITH COLOR

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For a few years now, the monotone, all-white kitchen has been popular, with Instagram feeds full of white-and-cream cabinetry and pale woods. It looked clean, and like it meant business — a culinary clinic, if you will, and a far cry from the mid-2000s combo of cherry cabinets and granite counters.

But there’s a shift. The standard, nickel-plated hardware in a white kitchen might now be replaced with matte black and brass, or knobs and faucets in bright hues.

Whites are getting creamier, less cool. You’ll see woods, vegan leather and rattan as textural elements to warm things up.

“The classic all-white kitchen is as relevant as it ever was, but there’s a new need and demand for color,” says Bob Bakes, co-founder and head of design for Bakes & Kropp, a kitchen design and custom cabinetry firm in New York City.

He’s recently used sky blue, stone gray and a red called geranium on kitchen projects, and a glossy black in a butler’s pantry.

Betty Brandolino, founder and creative director of Fresh Twist Studio in Elmhurst, Illinois, sees a similar move toward color. “White isn’t out, but we are implementi­ng painted or natural wood islands as opposed to an all-white kitchen,” she says.

KITCHENS WITH PERSONALIT­Y

“I’m excited to see that people are becoming more experiment­al in their design choices, from mixing metals to integratin­g a variety of textures,” Bakes says.

Lighting is one way to bring personalit­y and modernity to kitchens. Recessed can lights are still with us, but there’s now a lot of statement lighting, too: a row of pendants or a supersize fixture over an island, for example.

While subway tile still dominates backsplash­es, some are tweaking how it’s used. “For example, applying them in unexpected patterns such as vertically instead of horizontal­ly, and stacked instead of staggered,” Erin Davis, a designer in Portland, Oregon, noted on the real estate platform Homelight,

Big sections of ceramic tile are also popular. New tech has allowed makers to make large but thinner, lighter slabs that are easier to work with. And fewer grout lines mean they’re easier to clean.

OPEN PLAN, CLOSED PANTRIES

The pandemic made us choose sides when it comes to kitchen layouts. You either embraced an open plan, where everyone could easily interact, or you were grateful for your closed-room kitchen, where some could cook without disturbing others who were studying or on Zoom calls.

“We’re still seeing a desire for open floor plans,” Bakes says. “I don’t think the need to separate the kitchen is making a return quite yet.”

But there are tweaks to the open plan. One example is butler’s pantries — an adjunct space to the main kitchen where mess-making can take place and gear can be stowed.

“We’re designing more hidden pantries for appliances like toaster ovens, mixers and extra dishes,” Brandolino notes.

MATERIAL MIX

Houzz’s 2022 kitchen trends report noted that homeowners were willing to splurge on countertop­s, with quartz and porcelain expected to be favorite materials. Engineered quartz combines natural stone and resins to make a strong, impact-resistant material.

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