When you’re looking to remodel your kitchen with quartz countertops, the style options are endless. This is overwhelming to a lot of people, so we’ve compiled a list of six kitchen styles that work great with quartz countertops.
These styles bring out the beauty, durability, and timelessness of quartz. By utilizing these styles and bringing them to life in your home, you’ll get the most out of your countertop and your kitchen as a whole.
Check out the list of the six styles that coincide with quartz countertops.
1. Traditional
A traditional kitchen is clean, comforting, and inviting. It’s a kitchen that you and your whole family will love spending time in.
It’s also a timeless style to choose for your kitchen—it will never seem outdated because of the appeal that it holds. It combines classic design elements with bursts of color—put together for a kitchen that’s aesthetically pleasing.
Traditional kitchens commonly utilize white paint, tiles, and accents in order to create a crisp and clean look. You can add to this clean look with a quartz countertop in an ivory shade—one that is either solid white or has elements of gray in order to keep the crisp look going.
Offsetting this clean look with dark wood cabinetry and hardwood floors makes for a beautifully classic feel in the room.
Traditional kitchens are
elegant and timeless,
modern,
clean and welcoming, and
a combination of traditional and contemporary elements.
2. Beach
Who wouldn’t want to be at the beach every single day? You can do just that with a beach-themed kitchen. We don’t mean anything hokey or kitschy like a room covered in shells and mermaid decals, but something more understated and sophisticated—something that exudes a beach vibe rather than screams it.
Beach looks are achieved by utilizing cool shades of blue and warm shades of tan in order to put across a coastal feel. This kind of kitchen is relaxing, airy, and laid back.
You can put quartz to use in your beach kitchen in one of two ways: choosing a white countertop to offset the water and sand feel, or choosing a sand-colored countertop to create an image of the shore. This, combined with sheer window treatments and subtle accents like seagrass and wicker, will create a beach in your very own home.
Beach kitchens
are airy and filled with sunlight,
utilize cool shades of blue, and
include white hues for crispness.
3. Modern
Modern kitchens are sleek and sophisticated. They employ a minimalist vibe with as little clutter, excess decorations, and knickknacks as possible.
To get the full effect of a modern kitchen, you can use stark white or onyx black quartz countertops that are kept shiny and polished, accented with pops of color around the room. These types of kitchens are basic yet high quality. They exude luxury and feel high end in comparison to many other styles.
Modern kitchens are
exotic,
full of clean lines and silhouettes, and
minimalistic.
4. Farmhouse
Farmhouse is a kitchen design that never goes out of style. It has remained popular for decades. It is cozy, intimate, and can range from rustic to something more contemporary—whatever works best in your home and your taste.
There are usually plenty of decorations inside a farmhouse kitchen to create that cozy feel and to show off personal touches. They are also winners when it comes to visual appeal, utilizing details like exposed beams, brick accents, and pops of color.
Quartz is a great additive for farmhouse kitchens because of its versatility and durability. The farmhouse is all about nurturing things that last, and quartz countertops do just that. Choosing quartz in a warm hue will tie the whole room together.
Farmhouse kitchens are
cozy and comfortable,
full of decorations and small details, and
colorful.
5. Craftsman
Craftsman kitchens are all about utilizing long-lasting, natural materials. Though quartz technically qualifies as an engineered stone, it’s made with 95 percent natural quartz, so it can still come into play inside a craftsman kitchen in soft shades of tan or brown to bring the look together.
Wood and stone work together in a Craftsman kitchen, suggesting a simple way of life that comes across in the design. This type of kitchen is a place where your family gathers to eat, cook, and touch base at the end of a long day—just as families have done for centuries.
Craftsman kitchens are
artisanal,
made with natural materials,
rustic, and
organic and earthy.
6. Eclectic
Eclectic is probably the most “out there” style of kitchen right now. It’s all about the bold factor—bold colors, materials, decorations, and textures all in one place.
An eclectic kitchen is where your different preferences can come together. There’s no one set theme—in fact, the theme is the absence of a theme. It’s not nonsensical, though. An eclectic kitchen should boast confidence and flair, not mess and disarray.
Eclectic kitchens are personable, fun, and stimulating for the eye. Quartz is a great asset for an eclectic kitchen because it can act as a quiet material in relation to the rest of the kitchen’s louder details.
Eclectic kitchens are
multifaceted
personalized, and
full of rich colors and textures.
What’s Your Style?
No matter your style and preference, quartz can make your dream kitchen come to life. You just have to know how to use it.