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这个柜子颜色将帮助你的厨房感到“Less Sterile,” According to a Celebrity Chef

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Credit: Margaret Rajic | Stocksy

Conversations aroundkitchen cabinet colorshave been happening with increasing frequency since the pandemic began. And it’s not hard to see why: with more cooking at home, people are yearning to make their kitchens more exciting to be in. An easy way to do that?Refresh your cabinetswith a little bit of colorful paint — and for celebrity chef Curtis Stone, it’s all about the deep green.

Stone — who recently led a cooking demo withWolferman’s Bakeryfor National English Muffin Day and understands the whole “spending more time in the home kitchen” thing — uses dark green to make his cooking space feelless boring. “Traditionally cabinets sort of just blend in, the whole kitchen has felt a little generic. The cabinets are usually light in color, and so is the tile, so is the stone,” Stone told Apartment Therapy. “It can all just fit a bit sterile and we really wanted it to feel quite warm.”

Credit: Andrea D’Agosto

In order to prevent this blandness from happening, Stone went with agreenthat he described as “slightly deeper than a hunter green.” By combining that color tone withbrasshandles, he was able to create a warm backdrop for all moments of the day, from breakfast with his kids in the morning to winding down at the island at night.

An additional component that really makes the dark green cabinets shine is the white subway tile backsplash. Against stark white, the rich green cabinets pop and grab more attention. So a good takeaway tip is if you’re going for a moodier cabinet color, incorporate some lightness into other kitchen details to create an eye-catching contrast.

If you’re feeling kind of meh about your kitchen these days, grab a paintbrush and a can of dark green paint. You’ll thank Stone later.

Nicoletta Richardson

Entertainment Editor

In her spare time, Nicoletta loves marathoning the latest Netflix show, doing at-home workouts, and nurturing her plant babies. Her work has appeared in Women’s Health, AFAR, Tasting Table, and Travel + Leisure, among others. A graduate from Fairfield University, Nicoletta majored in English and minored in Art History and Anthropology, and she not-so-secretly dreams of exploring her family lineage in Greece one day.

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