This finish is known to show the most streaks, smudges, and fingerprints, requiring routine cleaning to keep it looking good as new. One use of an abrasive cleaning solution could also damage the surface, leaving permanently visible marks and scratches.
Be careful while cleaning your appliances and do your best to prevent children from touching kitchen surfaces with dirty hands. Before you know it, wiping down the stainless steel will turn into a full-time job.
Anything that spills on a refrigerator, cooktop, or dishwasher can be cleaned with no stains or streaking if you wipe with the grain of the metal. We mentioned how greasy fingerprints can be an aesthetic pitfall, so if you desire a permanently spotless kitchen space, stainless steel could prove to be bothersome.
White and black kitchen appliances with a matte finish tend to not show fingerprints as easily, but over time, white appliances can show more signs of dirt and scuff marks along the doors and handles. Black appliances require a more meticulous cleaning regimen because they are the least likely to show visible streaks and smudges; you have to go looking for them. For a modern and easily adaptable design, there's nothing like the look of stainless steel.
If you want your appliances to blend into your kitchen space so your backsplash and cabinetry can steal the show, then white appliances are the perfect neutral solution to achieve this look. Decide what finish and features you desire and set a price range for your new appliances.
Architectural Digest Clever. LG Bottom-Freezer Refrigerator. Beko Inch Professional Gas Range. Smeg Refrigerator. Nostalgie Series Oven. According to a recent study from Houzz , nearly two-thirds of homeowners in the survey spent more than three hours in their kitchens.
Kitchens are now places to watch TV, entertain and read, as well as cook and bake. Please note that this article contains affiliate links, and you can read my full disclosure at the bottom of the page. As kitchens keep shifting to look more like the living rooms, they are more posh, less utilitarian. Homeowners are personalizing kitchens with bold appliances, cozy seating, stone surfaces, and cool fixtures — from sculptural faucets to interesting pendant lights.
As kitchens become more and more our living spaces, homeowners are making them more comfortable. Personalizing the kitchen adds to the comfort of the room.
Their popularity continues, even though more homeowners are opening up to other styles and finishes. People like stainless steel. It matches every wood tone and finishes. Dark wood, light wood, and white cabinets all look good with stainless steel. The Five most popular kitchens on Houzz for all had stainless-steel appliances.
In the right kitchen, all of these finishes will look great. But none have really taken off like stainless steel…not yet. As the kitchen becomes more integrated, many homeowners are personalizing with greater boldness.
As brass and gold have made a comeback, as well as bronze and other metals, there is less reason to stick with just one finish. Mixing metals, although it must be done carefully, is a growing option in design. In high-end homes, look for designers to play with metals more than in the past. Appliances that have a satin or matte finish, whether in steel or other metals, are appearing in showrooms.
Matte is used to describe something that lacks shine, so it looks more dull and flat. There is, however, a good functional reason not to buy a matching set from a single manufacturer. If you look at consumer ratings for kitchen appliances, you'll find that a single manufacturer almost never receives top ratings across the board for all their appliances.
Instead, you'll find that one manufacturer makes excellent ranges, but mediocre dishwashers, while another does better with dishwashers but has poorly rated refrigerators. A manufacturer set will invariably leave you with some clunkers in your kitchen for the sake of matching nameplates. If you're thinking that buying all your appliances from a single manufacturer sounds like a universally terrible idea, well, that's mostly true.
But there's an exception for every rule. In this case, that exception comes in the form of rebates. You'll occasionally find manufacturer rebate programs that give you money back based on the number of appliances you purchase from that manufacturer. Local appliance stores may offer similar deals if they're trying to reduce inventory. I'm generally a pragmatic person, so to me the idea of buying matching appliances seems foolish. I hadn't considered how much money could be saved with rebates, but absent some serious savings, buying an inferior appliance just for the sake of matching the others in the kitchen is the last thing I'd even consider when remodeling a kitchen.
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