Photo: @visualization1 Kitchen Photo
Using Palm Leaf in the kitchen allows the architectural details—like open shelving or a custom range hood—to stand out. It creates a soft-focus background that makes even a simple stack of white plates look like a deliberate design choice.
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Jotun Palm Leaf kitchen paint
@cecilieinterior
1 Kitchen Photo
Pale brown is particularly effective in kitchens with a lot of natural light. It tempers the glare from sun hitting polished surfaces, providing a matte-like visual anchor that keeps the room feeling grounded even during the brightest parts of the day.
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RAL Classic Pale brown 8025 kitchen
@wesprayupvc
1 Kitchen Photo
For smaller kitchens, Parlor Rose can be used to create a "jewel box" effect. By painting the walls and trim in this same shade, you eliminate visual breaks, making the room feel more expansive and sophisticated despite its modest footprint.
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Parlor Rose keeps this kitchen feeling open and well-considered.
@visualization
1 Kitchen Photo
For smaller kitchens, Palest of Lemon can be used to create a "jewel box" effect. By painting the walls and trim in this same shade, you eliminate visual breaks, making the room feel more expansive and sophisticated despite its modest footprint.
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Palest of Lemon keeps this kitchen feeling open and well-considered.
@visualization
1 Kitchen Photo
In a farmhouse or traditional kitchen, Palmetto Bluff adds a layer of modern relevance. It updates classic cabinetry and apron-front sinks without clashing with the traditional "bones" of the house, offering a bridge between the old and the new.
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Palmetto Bluff keeps this kitchen feeling open and well-considered.
@visualization
1 Kitchen Photo
Kitchens are often the noisiest rooms in the house; Pale Quartz provides the visual equivalent of acoustic dampening. Its steady, calm presence helps lower the "volume" of the room, creating a more pleasant environment for cooking and conversation.
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This kitchen scene shows how Pale Quartz holds up under practical light.
@visualization
1 Kitchen Photo
Paradise City is particularly effective in kitchens with a lot of natural light. It tempers the glare from sun hitting polished surfaces, providing a matte-like visual anchor that keeps the room feeling grounded even during the brightest parts of the day.
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Paradise City keeps this kitchen feeling open and well-considered.
@visualization
1 Kitchen Photo
For smaller kitchens, Parkwater can be used to create a "jewel box" effect. By painting the walls and trim in this same shade, you eliminate visual breaks, making the room feel more expansive and sophisticated despite its modest footprint.
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Parkwater keeps this kitchen feeling open and well-considered.
@visualization
1 Kitchen Photo
Paradise in a kitchen reads differently from how it might anywhere else — the hard surfaces, task lighting, and constant activity give it more to work against, and it holds up beautifully. It doesn't compete with the colors of food or the texture of countertops; instead, it frames them with a professional finish.
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Paradise on the kitchen walls — a backdrop that works without demanding attention.
@visualization
1 Kitchen Photo
In a modern kitchen, Pale Shrimp provides the necessary "organic" touch to offset stainless steel appliances and glass backsplashes. It prevents the kitchen from feeling like a laboratory, injecting a much-needed sense of domestic warmth and culinary inspiration.
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Pale Shrimp on the kitchen walls — a backdrop that works without demanding attention.
@visualization
1 Kitchen Photo
The sophisticated undertones of Pale Terra make it an excellent partner for mixed metal finishes. Whether you have a brass faucet and matte black cabinet pulls, or traditional chrome fixtures, this color acts as a neutral mediator that makes the mix look intentional.
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This kitchen scene shows how Pale Terra holds up under practical light.
@visualization
1 Kitchen Photo
On kitchen walls, Parrot Tulip adds a considered, intentional feel without demanding too much attention in a busy space. It holds its own against both warm wood countertops and cool quartz or marble, making it an incredibly flexible choice for the hardest-working and most high-traffic room in the house.
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Parrot Tulip keeps this kitchen feeling open and well-considered.
@visualization
1 Kitchen Photo
In a farmhouse or traditional kitchen, Pansy Posie adds a layer of modern relevance. It updates classic cabinetry and apron-front sinks without clashing with the traditional "bones" of the house, offering a bridge between the old and the new.
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Pansy Posie keeps this kitchen feeling open and well-considered.
@visualization
1 Kitchen Photo
The sophisticated undertones of Parchment make it an excellent partner for mixed metal finishes. Whether you have a brass faucet and matte black cabinet pulls, or traditional chrome fixtures, this color acts as a neutral mediator that makes the mix look intentional.
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Parchment keeps this kitchen feeling open and well-considered.
@visualization
1 Kitchen Photo
The challenge with kitchen color is longevity: it needs to look right at 7am under bright task lights and at dinner with the pendants dimmed low. Paper manages to bridge all three lighting scenarios with ease, which is a rarer quality in a paint pigment than it sounds.
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Paper keeps this kitchen feeling open and well-considered.
@visualization

