Metallic finish kitchens: A New Way to Think About Finish

Metal kitchen design today means using metal laminate or metal-finish cabinetry as a deliberate aesthetic choice, not as a nod to industrial or professional kitchens, but as a way to bring depth, precision and quiet contrast into a home. It works in minimal spaces, in warm combinations with wood, and in open-plan layouts where it acts as a visual connector. The material is more versatile than it looks, and the result depends almost entirely on how it is combined.

Why metallic finishes work in kitchen design

Why metallic finishes work in kitchen design

Metal laminate finish behaves differently from paint or wood veneer. It reflects light rather than absorbing it, which means it reads differently depending on the time of day, the direction of the light source, and what surrounds it. This is not a neutral material, it has presence, but it is a controlled one. It doesn't dominate a space the way a bold colour does. It adds a layer of depth that changes with the room rather than staying fixed.

The practical implication is that metal finish is highly combination-dependent. The same door in the same finish will feel precise and cool next to white lacquer, and layered and warm next to oak or a terracotta tone. Knowing this is the starting point for using it well.

How to combine a metallic finish in a kitchen

How to combine a metallic finish in a kitchen

In minimalist kitchens, laminated metal reinforces clean lines and visual continuity. Combined with neutral tones, white, light gray, and off-white, it creates a serene backdrop where proportion and geometry carry the weight of the composition. The finish adds precision without adding noise.

Combined with wood or warm colors, the same finish changes its tone. The contrast between metal and a natural material creates a sense of layering; the space reads as thoughtfully designed, not flat. It's one of the most reliable combinations in contemporary kitchen design: the warmth of wood anchors the space, and metal provides tension.

In small kitchens, the reflective quality of the metallic finish has a practical dimension: it amplifies light and increases the perceived depth of the space. In open-plan spaces, it acts as a connector, a finish that spans different areas and unites them without the need for strong visual breaks.

There isn't just one way to use it. And that's exactly what makes it interesting.

How to approach kitchen design with metal

How to approach kitchen design with metal

The correct starting point is not, “Should I use metal?” but rather, “How do I want this kitchen to feel, and can metal support that?”

Metal finishes work well in spaces where the goal is calm and restraint, where the design works through proportion and combination rather than through statement pieces. It also works in kitchens with more contrast and character, where it acts as a precise element between warmer, organic materials.

What it doesn't do well: sustain a design on its own. A kitchen built around metal as a statement, without a clear idea of what surrounds it, tends to feel cold. The material needs a counterbalance. That counterbalance can be warmth (wood, aged brass, textured stone), light (a south-facing orientation, large windows), or proportion (enough space for the finish to breathe rather than compress).

At CUBRO, we design kitchens where the finish is a decision that follows form, not the other way around. If you are considering metal as part of your kitchen, the first question we ask is how the space needs to feel to live in it, not just to look at it. The finish is the last step, not the first.