Anonymous wrote:We have warm gray kitchen cabinets with a creamy granite and a warm mid-tone bamboo floor. It looks amazing and we have no regrets. It may look dated in ten years, but white or wood tone cabinets look dated right now.
When we were looking at houses 99% of the homes we saw were full of brown...wood cabinets, wood floor, tan backsplash, brown granite, tan carpet. Some people may prefer brown. We prefer gray. When we get sick of it, we'll change it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people update kitchens and baths every ten years so who cares what's dated later
Most people do not renovate their kitchens and bathrooms every ten years.
Most people live with their kitchens for 20-30 years and their bathrooms as well.
If you can't redo bathrooms and kitchens every ten years, you have over extended yourself
Anonymous wrote:I think it depends on the light you have in the room. We chose espresso cabinets and light granite when we built our new construction house. We loved it at first. Then the houses on either side of us were built and our natural light was reduced and I think the room is now way too dark for espresso cabinets. Gray cabinets without sufficient natural light could look dreary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people update kitchens and baths every ten years so who cares what's dated later
Most people do not renovate their kitchens and bathrooms every ten years.
Most people live with their kitchens for 20-30 years and their bathrooms as well.
If you can't redo bathrooms and kitchens every ten years, you have over extended yourself
Renovating big expensive rooms like kitchens and bathrooms as soon as you tire of them is a VERY recent, HGTV inspired trend.
It is frivolous and wasteful to tear out and redo your kitchen and bathrooms in such quick intervals in the same way you would redecorate and change the paint and textiles in your bedroom.
This is true whether you are living paycheck to paycheck or are pare of the DCUM "I know I make $300K a year but I am really middle class at best" crowd.
It is a waste of money and a definite waste of resources.
Save a tree. Pick classic colors and styles for your cabinets that will stand the test of time and save trends for things like paint, door pulls and backsplashes.
Anonymous wrote:Gray is sad
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have lightly stained maple cabinets but used a modern glass and metal tile mosaic for the backsplash and I get so many complements on it. I love the natural look of the wood and the tile really pops.
Can you share a picture of your backsplash? That sounds pretty. We have lightly stained maple too and I want to update our kitchen but installing new countertops and a new backsplash. Looking for ways to update when le keeping our current cabinets.
Anonymous wrote:I have lightly stained maple cabinets but used a modern glass and metal tile mosaic for the backsplash and I get so many complements on it. I love the natural look of the wood and the tile really pops.
Anonymous wrote:Subway tiles are also classic.
We went with white cabinets and a white/gray/marble-y quartz countertop. The floors throughout the house are dark wood. Stainless steel tile backsplash (which I fear we will tire of one day, but I love it now). Very light gray walls.
Anonymous wrote:Do NOT do gray.
White is timeless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people update kitchens and baths every ten years so who cares what's dated later
Most people do not renovate their kitchens and bathrooms every ten years.
Most people live with their kitchens for 20-30 years and their bathrooms as well.
If you can't redo bathrooms and kitchens every ten years, you have over extended yourself
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people update kitchens and baths every ten years so who cares what's dated later
Most people do not renovate their kitchens and bathrooms every ten years.
Most people live with their kitchens for 20-30 years and their bathrooms as well.
If you can't redo bathrooms and kitchens every ten years, you have over extended yourself