There are many ways to bring color into your environment – get inspired by these projects:

Life may not always be rose, but your kitchen can. Architects and designers often choose different shades of pink when they want to add interest and personality to a home. functional spaceas in the case of the kitchen.
In form and style – romantic, vintage or sophisticated – color is able to bring more life and transform the environment.
So, from bubble gum-colored cabinets in a Tokyo apartment to pink mosaics found in a modernist Greek villa, we are gathered here 10 kitchens who use pink in a very creative way to inspire you. Watch:
1. NagatachÅ apartment, by Adam Nathaniel Furman (Japan)

A bubblegum pink is the heart of this Tokyo apartment by British designer Adam Nathaniel Furman, and is playfully contrasted with the “watermelon green” floor stripes.
“Much of the way I described the project as I was developing it was through taste and references to cooking and food, so the color palette became a matter of choosing ingredients for a wonderfully calibrated visual feast,” he said. Furman in Dezeen.
2. St Minas House, by Neiheiser Argyros (Greece)

Neiheiser Argyros used playful colors and materials to complement the existing modernist details of a 1970s villa near Athens, which the architecture firm refurbished last year.
The kitchen’s limited material palette of exposed brick and cast concrete with planks was complemented with unexpected touches like perforated aluminum cabinetry and a vintage pink mosaic backsplash with matching counter tops.
3. Minimal Fantasy Apartment, by Patricia Bustos Studio (Spain)

All rooms and most of the surfaces of this holiday apartment in Madrid have finish in a shade of pink – at the kitchen sink.
Local office Patricia Bustos Studio only broke with the color palette on the furniture fronts, which are interrupted by brass accents and geometric shapes in denim and sky blue.
4. Mixtape Apartment, by Azab (Spain)

Pale pink walls and cabinet doors help liven up this kitchen in a 60s apartmentthat the Spanish architecture firm Azab refurbished for a pensioner in Bilbao.
Mismatched herringbone floors tie the color scheme together, bringing small aromas of mint green and cherry red along with a muted beige to match the wood finishes on the kitchen countertop.
5. Studio11 Office, by Studio11 (Belarus)

When designing their workplace in Minsk, the interior studio Studio11 aimed at avoid simple industrial aesthetics favorite of many design and architecture studios.
This meant juxtaposing the concrete and plaster surfaces of the interiors with vibrant details, such as an abstract portrait of Belarusian painter Zakhar Kudin or a blush-colored counter that faces the partially blue-painted walls in the shared kitchen.
6. Lerma Workshop, by Estudio Nu (Argentina)

The Argentine firm Estudio Nu created this communal kitchen by sharing their design studio, housed in a former dental laboratory in Buenos Aires, to create offices accessible to other local creatives.
Here, pink tiles were chosen to match the interior’s soft material palette, which combines corrugated glass doors with light wood walls and concrete floors.
7. Showroom Designers Remix, by Reform (Denmark)

The Danish brand Reform, specialized in the customization of IKEA kitchens, was inspired by the makeup palettes colors and shades during the design of the highlight area of ââthis fashion showroom in Copenhagen.
Here, kitchen countertops from Reform’s Basis collection are finished in progressively deeper pastel shades, ranging from peach to blush and dark pink, paired with a black sink and faucet.
8. House and the River, by After Party (Lithuania)

White walls, floors and ceilings create a bright and modern ambiance within this stream house in northern Lithuania, with added character in the form of antique furniture Soviet era and unexpected color accents.
Its monochromatic kitchen is tucked under a loft and is punctuated by a salmon-colored island with a ballet pink granite countertop.
9. Apartment in Born, by Colombo and Serboli Architecture (Spain)

A coral pink arched block tucks into a second bathroom next to the kitchen of this compact apartment, located in a 13th-century residential building in Barcelona’s historic El Born district.
This same pattern is repeated in the breakfast island with its curved rose quartz worktop and pink dining table.
10. Maison Pour Dodo, by Studio Merlin (UK)

Light plaster walls and fir wood floors contrast with the smoky blue cabinets inside this apartment in Stoke Newington, London, which the local studio Studio Merlin renovated for founder Josh Piddock and his girlfriend.
* Via Dezeen
Source: Terra

Benjamin Smith is a fashion journalist and author at Gossipify, known for his coverage of the latest fashion trends and industry insights. He writes about clothing, shoes, accessories, and runway shows, providing in-depth analysis and unique perspectives. He’s respected for his ability to spot emerging designers and trends, and for providing practical fashion advice to readers.