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Today, we see cabinets in every imaginable color from bright yellow or white, warm browns, and cool blues, to dark black. Whatever you choose for your cabinet color, the right material and color of countertop can result in highlighting the best features of both. Don’t panic, it doesn’t have to be difficult to decide on the perfect combo. Here’s how to start:

Turquoise blue cabinets complimented by IRG's Calacatta Paonazzo Marble with copper and gold accents.
 

Start with Your Home Itself.

The style of your home and your great room areas are factors playing a major role in your kitchen decisions. Is your style sleek and modern? Then a neutral palette inspired by nature with a splash of color might be appropriate. Casual, comfy country might call for blues and yellows or greens. Fun, fantastic bohemian space more your style? Then the sky’s the limit for your color palette choices

Go to your local bookstore, look through, and then buy, home design magazines with styles that appeal to you. Pay attention to the colors in the photos and see if they fit with your home style.

Dark cabinets brings out the veining of IRG's Calacatta Viola Marble in this kitchen.
 

Pick a Palette and Go in Style.

We’ve written about choosing colors for areas in your home based on the feel and effect you’re wanting to achieve; calming, exciting, motivating, etc. Your kitchen is no exception.

The kitchen is often the central meeting place to socialize while prepping and enjoying meals or entertaining. The easiest color starting point is to choose two main colors, based on the mood you want to set, and then add touches of a third to set your own design tone. For example, start with a main palette of black and white, then add in touches of light birch, highlights of gold and a splash of silver.

But don’t stop your investigation here.

  

Consider Color: The Best Match.

If you’re still daunted by color, you might look at a color wheel. A color wheel can help you develop a palette to choose from. You can pick and adjust colors based on color harmony rules. Here’s three to start with.

  • Complimentary Colors. These colors sit across from each other on the color wheel. As the name suggests, they complement each other, bringing out the best in each other.
  • Analogous Colors. These sit next to each other on the color wheel. They can share the same space just as comfortably in your kitchen. The result is a less contrasty more calming setting.
  • Neutral colors. These colors include, black, greys, whites, beiges, and brown tones. Neutrals are extremely popular in interior design right now. While not vibrant choices, these hues often form a safe background and starting point for entry into color decisions because you can change out you color scheme more easily with stronger color choices in accents and accessories.

Mix, match, compare, and contrast color. There’s plenty of online tools to help you visualize color choices. Here’s one of our favorites.

Illustrated color wheels showing primary, secondary, and tertiary colors.

Cabinet or Counter: Which comes first?

We have good news on this choice: It doesn’t matter.

If you fall in love with a cabinet color or a countertop, just match it with the other. Understand, however, that not all cabinets go with all counter surfaces. For example, a white countertop with white cabinets might be too much of a good thing. The result can be, well, white. Instead of accenting the room, it can be one bland, monotonous room that doesn’t feel comfortable to live in.

Instead, you might select a cabinet color that you love, and look for a counter surface that has an accent of that color in its veining. For example, maybe you fell in love with white cabinets. Instead of white marble, which might look too sterile, maybe choose Black Moon Polished Marble, whose rich black will complement the cabinets and tie them together with the white veining.

There are many countertop choices, the most popular being natural stone, including marble, granite, quartzite, and soapstone. Engineered stone such as pental quartz or porcelain slabs are also choices many homeowners feel fit their needs. Occasionally consumers choose butcher block, stainless steel, or concrete for their countertop surfaces. 

The most-used cabinet material is wood, with many styles to choose from, including open shelving.

If you’ve found a countertop surface that brings hearts to your eyes, hold a photo of that cabinet style (or better yet, get a sample door panel) against it to consider the effect of the combo. Likewise, an existing set of cabinets may be your starting point, consider that many can be successfully painted, modified, or totally changed out.

Light birch color cabinets tie the room together by drawing shades from IRG's Azul Bahia Granite countertops.
 

Color Counterpoints.

Sometimes, seeing is believing, so here are some well-chosen examples:

Warm-toned wood cabinets get extra oomph from a frosty white quartz or quartzite
Warm-toned wood cabinets get extra oomph from a frosty white quartz or quartzite.

Beautiful blue marbles are a luxurious choice with cherry woods or dark walnuts
Beautiful blue marbles are a luxurious choice with cherry woods or dark walnuts.

Deep charcoal or very dark brown countertops can be enhanced with creamy colored cabinets
Obviously wood grained cupboards pair well with blues and greens in granite, marble, or quartzite.

Reddish oak shelving makes richly veined marble stand out even more strongly
Reddish oak shelving makes richly veined marble stand out even more strongly

Obviously wood grained cupboards pair well with blues and greens in granite, marble, or quartzite
Deep charcoal or very dark brown countertops can be enhanced with creamy colored cabinets.

And then there’s the New Countersplash!

Thanks to the new and soaring interest in natural stone slabs, a technique has emerged using the same slab material on the backsplash area as the counter itself. This flowing look has given birth to a new term in the design world: Countersplash. When well matched, the look is a modern, seamless take on traditional backsplash treatments—very in and very worth a look.

The Calacatta Wet Bar by Paul Dyer
 

When You’re Ready.

When you’ve thought it through and you’re ready, let IRG help you choose the right surface for the cabinets that you want. IRG’s experienced staff can give you the personal attention you need to make that choice from an unsurpassed in-stock selection of natural and engineered stone.

Call IRG at (415) 657-0280 or visit us at a showroom convenient to you in Brisbane, Dublin, or Sacramento.

IRG sales and warehouse staff posing together