If you feel like you've been seeing a lot of curvy kitchens on social media lately, you're not imagining things. Architects and kitchen designers are turning to softer edges on countertops and islands, in backsplashes and even on cabinet doors to dress up the cold white kitchen that has been the go-to look for the past couple of decades.
The sexy new Beverly Hills kitchen of John Legend and Chrissy Teigen, featured on the cover of September's AD, showcases the trend in all its curvy glory. The entire house, by interior designer Jake Arnold, is full of rounded shapes, including a plaster staircase and gently curved velvet chairs.
But the showstopper is the luxury kitchen, where a 15-foot island of swirly caramel calacatta macchia vecchia marble with rounded corners dominates the space. A dramatic hood above the range on the island has a parchment-colored plaster cover with rounded corners, rather than the industrial look of most exhaust hoods. And brass bar stools made at (Wh)Ore Haüs Studios have inviting fuzzy upholstered seats, covered in Pierre Frey's yeti fabric, a mix of wool, mohair and longhair alpaca.
"Since the architecture was very contemporary and angular, my goal was to soften the space," Arnold says. "We added lots of roundness to the house and I wanted the kitchen island to be inviting and sculptural. Chrissy loves to cook and I wanted everything to be beautiful but super functional in there.
"Most of the islands I do now have the corners softened," he adds. "I tend to stay away from very clean lines, I find them too harsh. This is more family friendly, and it makes it more livable."
Curves in kitchens are both practical and have an aesthetic appeal, Jen Nash, head of design at Magnet, a large kitchen specialist in the U.K., wrote in an email. "While they can soften the space and serve as a focal point in open-plan spaces, they can also be integrated with other design features, such as curved walls, furniture and lighting fixtures, creating a cohesive and somewhat playful design theme," Nash says.
Just as curved sofas look inviting and comfortable, kitchens with softer edges can have a more approachable vibe. And rounded edges and spherical shapes can connect a kitchen made for family gatherings with the living area in an open-plan space.
"When there are no hard edges, the kitchen makes a smooth transition from dining area to the living room," says Thomas Morbitzer, co-owner of New York-based architecture and interior design firm AMMOR.