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Cabinet Designs #17

By: Michael Russell

Article Word Count: 439



There are a number of things to consider when planning kitchen cabinet designs. Form and function become the primary goals: the general style and motif of the room is a major imperative. The materials to be used is another important element. And upgrading and decorating also come into play in the cabinet designs plan.

STYLE of CABINET DESIGNS

You will want to decorate according to your motif. If the kitchen is traditional, for instance, the cabinet designs will incorporate calm and conservative colors in medium to dark woods, making the cabinet facades match the other items in the room for a balance of dcor.

If the cabinet designs will fit a contemporary style, they may be of minimalist lines, sleek and clean and bare in neo-metal surfaces and flush and narrow spacesor, they may be emphatically easy to use, yet have a bit more warmth than the original contemporary sparseness first displayed.

In similar respect, French Country style cabinet designs would present the rustic, worn, homey look and feel, while Mission style dcor would have cabinets in rugged, square-bodied, deep and darker woods and forms.

MATERIALS for CABINET DESIGNS

Word has it in some circles that the natural materials are welcomed back into cabinet designs. Highlighted with granite countertops and/or stone floors like slate, for instance, cabinet designs can include a great may kinds of natural woods. These natural materials, the oldest and most obvious of choices for cabinet designs, of course, will have what is called figurea natural patternsuch as a knotted look, a quilting, a birdseye pattern, fiddleback, or spalting effects. In addition, there are harder woods such as Madrone (specific to areas in California, for example) Maple, Walnut, and Cherry; soft woods like Alder and Lacewood (the latter grown in Australia); lighter woods like Pine or Birch; or dark woods such as Burl and Bloodwood.

ADDITIONS to CABINET DESIGNS

The cabinet materials can be provided pre-cut and pre-built but raw, so they can be stained, painted, stenciled, or even etched. Further, when planning cabinet designs, you will want to take into account what color, material and degree of blacksplashes you want, what spacing to use, as well as what other items will be in the kitchen triangle areathe area between sink, stove, and cabinetsso that you will have usability, high functionality that meets with the efforts you put into the form. That is, what you add to and near your cabinets will matter as much as the cabinet designs details of weight, color, class, and style.


Article Source: Cabinets Guide

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