Anonymous wrote:I love my two-tone cabinets and think they make my small kitchen look more spacious. To be honest, I didn't even realize they were two different colors until after I'd moved in (as in, I missed it during touring the house and all of the inspection/closing procedures). Then one day it registered and I was like...wait a minute...the bottom cabinets are espresso brown, and the uppers are white. The effect being that the lower cabinets kind of visually recede into the floor and the uppers into the ceiling. I can't really explain it other than to say it's almost like the cabinets disappear and make the space feel larger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think two tone kitchens are a good way to play with bold colors that would be overwhelming to use alone. Blue, green, red, purple on the bottom, and then clean white on the top.
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https://philkeankitchens.com/tag/two-toned-kitchens/
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https://www.hgtv.com/design/design-blog/design/two-toned-kitchen-ideas
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https://ideas.kohler.com/mood-board/american-plum-kitchen
That turquoise makes my heart happy
Anonymous wrote:How are you just now noticing this.
Anonymous wrote:It’s been around for a while and I would never do this in my own kitchen.
Anonymous wrote:I think two tone kitchens are a good way to play with bold colors that would be overwhelming to use alone. Blue, green, red, purple on the bottom, and then clean white on the top.
![]()
https://philkeankitchens.com/tag/two-toned-kitchens/
![]()
https://www.hgtv.com/design/design-blog/design/two-toned-kitchen-ideas
![]()
https://ideas.kohler.com/mood-board/american-plum-kitchen
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We just did this. We had those awful honey red colored raised panel cabinets with blech brown granite. As a mini self reno during Covid lockdown, we painted top cabinets BM Simply White. We removed a few uppers and Added a few open shelves to look a little more current. We changed countertops to white quartz with movement and crisp small beveled marble white tiles from Home Depot as a backspash. Now I’m not hating those lower cabinets nearly as much. New pendants, new hardware, and new fridge. We did it all for around 5k, not counting the fridge. We don’t plan on being in our house more than 3-5 years. It felt risky to try it, but it has panned our for sure. I felt good when I looked at Christopher Peacock’s website and saw some honey colored wood lowers.
Oh no, you kept the bottom cabinets that awful orangey-brown? Why didn't you just paint them??? I mean if you insist on two tone, paint them gray or black!
Anonymous wrote:We just did this in our reno last year. Island is mahogany and perimeter is white. We love it
Anonymous wrote:Question:
I know two tone kitchens where the island is a different color has been a trend for quite some time and it looks great, but I’m not sold on two tone kitchens that don’t have an island and the upper and lower cabinets are different colors. What’s the consensus on doing two tone when you don’t have space for an island?
Anonymous wrote:We have white upper cabinets and blue lower cabinets, which we put in when we renovated a couple years ago. I love it. All blue would have been too dark. All white would have been too boring. I don't really care what other people think since it's my house where I spend time every day, not for a few hours a couple times per year.