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Jasmine Roth's Two-Tone Wood Cabinets Are Revolutionary. Here's How She Did It
Jasmine Roth's innovative kitchen design for Katt and Vinny, featured on "Help! I Wrecked My House," showcases a unique approach to two-tone wood cabinets. The design, described as midcentury boho, subtly integrates natural white oak accents within a dominant walnut cabinetry scheme. This design choice is not immediately obvious but, once noticed, feels intrinsically right, challenging conventional two-tone designs that often involve painted elements.
Roth emphasizes the intentionality behind mixing wood tones, particularly when the contrast is significant, as seen with the light white oak and dark walnut. This walnut theme extends throughout the home, appearing as both primary and accent elements, ensuring a cohesive design. The kitchen's tall, unadorned cabinet doors and drawer fronts, while flirting with a dated aesthetic, achieve timelessness through the meticulous coherence of details. The cabinet fronts are bookmatched, creating a seamless appearance as if cut from a single piece of wood, contributing to a solid, unified look.
To prevent the extensive cabinetry from appearing monotonous, Roth introduces intentional variations. These include three types of tile, two different countertop materials, white appliances, and the contrasting white oak. The white oak is strategically used, primarily for drawer pulls, as the cabinet doors lack handles, and for an inset coffee bar. These accents are precisely placed to introduce lightness and refinement, counteracting any potential for the space to feel heavy, dark, or outdated.
Unlike common two-tone kitchen cabinet trends, which frequently utilize painted components, Roth's design employs two natural wood tones. This approach, while echoing some aspects of 1970s interior design, resonates more closely with midcentury aesthetics. Homeowner Katt’s appreciation for the wood-on-wood handles highlights this connection. The overall design incorporates enough boho eclecticism to transcend a strict midcentury modern label, yet maintains a strong midcentury vocabulary.
Further reinforcing the multi-wood tone theme, other design elements like counter stools with half-iron, half-oak frames, and cane and reed elements in dining chairs, window blinds, and pendant light shades seamlessly blend the white oak and walnut. This thoughtful integration ensures that every component contributes to the overall two-tone wood treatment, creating a cohesive and revolutionary kitchen design that Roth considers one of her favorites.
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