6 Tips for Matching Your Kitchen Cabinets, Countertops and Floor

Your kitchen cabinets, countertops and floor are the three most significant elements of your kitchen affecting the aesthetical feel of the space, through their design, colour and style. And if you’re starting completely from scratch, after ripping out your old outdated kitchen or you’re are simply looking to change these three aspects and update your space, then you have a whole world of choices that are available to you. But coming up with a plan and ensuring you seamlessly merge the colour and style pairings of these three significant elements is crucial to making sure that your kitchen design ideas become a reality.

Start with Your Kitchen Countertops

Your countertop is probably going to be the most expensive aspect of your kitchen redesign; as a result, it is always better to start with it first. Choosing a countertop material can often be challenging, and the material itself can often have lots of varieties in style and colouring, so finding the one that resembles your ideas, will enable you to find the perfect cabinet and flooring, as you continue to redesign your kitchen. As some countertop materials can feature rather elaborate designs, from a natural effect of polished marble to ceramic tiles, it can generally be easier to choose your countertop and then start looking to pair your floor and cabinets. However, if your countertop features a more neutral design then pairing it with your flooring while utilising a dominant secondary colour for your kitchen cabinets can be a great design decision to make.

Kitchen Cabinets

The most economical kitchen cabinets are those that are prebuilt in in a variety of standard sizes, styles and finishes. These are referred to as stock cabinets. They are sometimes unfinished, enabling you to save more money by painting them to your preferred colour. Laminate and tile countertops pair up well with stock cabinets, offering economical countertops in varied colours and patterns. Custom-designed cabinets are built and finished to fit your particular kitchen design, but they come at a higher price.

Simplicity is The Key to Kitchen Design

The kitchen is the core room of your home, and the whole family uses it on a daily basis, so, simplicity is the key. Keeping the primary colour of your kitchen simple and quite common, while highlighting stronger colours with the use of appliances, is an excellent idea. This will enable you to easily update your kitchen area in future years without having to completely replace it every time you feel like making a change.

Choices of Colour Palette

When it comes to selecting a colour palette for your kitchen, there are several things to think about, firstly is your kitchen part of an open space dining and living area? If so, you will need to consider if the colour scheme you are thinking about for your kitchen will match up with the design of those other rooms. When considering your colour design, it’s worth taking a look at a colour palette and distinguishing a choice of three different colours, two dominant complimentary colours and one accent colour to highlight and add character to your kitchen.

Kitchen Accessories

Speaking of accent colours, the place you’ll look to use these is in your kitchen accessories and appliances, from a stunning high gloss white kitchen, with accents of red on your toaster and coffee machine, or even simply the use of colours on the chairs at your kitchen island if you plan on having one. Another area where colour can be combined to accent your kitchen is your kitchen cabinets where you can employ a contrasting colour from your floors and countertops to add character to the room.

Family Lifestyle

It’s important to consider your family’s lifestyle and needs when matching kitchen cabinetry and countertops especially if you have children or plan on having children in the near future. For example, base cabinets, drawers and tall floor cabinetry can allow children to easily pull sweets from them without climbing on a chair or countertop. Wall cabinets provide substantial storage space without taking up valuable floor space. Match your countertops to kitchen cabinetry based on your lifestyle needs. Some countertops, such as granite, concrete and wood, require periodic maintenance of sealing or oiling, while stainless steel, laminate, engineered stone require little work. Marble, granite and wood can also stain easily from spills, while engineered stone resists staining.