Warm modern interior with custom cabinetry
Dark cabinet fronts and a marble-look worktop set the tone before the eye reaches the rest of the room. The kitchen reads as part of a broader interior sequence, with custom kitchen cabinets running into the dining area and built-in storage shaping the walls. Wood veneer, matte lacquer and stone-effect tile flooring give each zone its own surface, while the large windows with curtains pull daylight across the finishes and soften the straight lines.
Kitchen pieces that frame the room
The kitchen is built from tall fronts, low storage runs and open shelving, so the wall never feels flat. On the work surface, the natural stone countertops catch the light in a way that keeps the surface visually active without breaking the calm palette. Fine seams, linear handles and recessed niches make the cabinetry read as a single composition. The result is less about display and more about structure: the custom kitchen cabinets hold the room together while leaving space for the dining table and circulation.
A marble-look kitchen with practical depth
At the bar, the marble-look kitchen surface becomes the main visual break. It sits against lighter fronts, darker stools and pendant lights that hang low enough to define the seating edge. In the images, the backsplash and worktop share a stone-like drawing, which gives the counter a heavier presence than a plain surface would. That effect is repeated in the kitchen views with sink, open shelves and narrow wood details, where the cabinet layout is doing as much visual work as the finish itself.
Daylight across curtains and glass
Large windows with curtains appear throughout the home, and they change the mood of each room without changing the architecture. In the dining setting, the curtains fall beside a wide glazed opening and allow the dark cabinet wall to sit against a much lighter background. In the living room, the same daylight lands on a pale sofa, a round glass pendant and a dark wall panel, making the contrast between soft textiles and crisp surfaces easy to read. The windows are not treated as backdrop; they shape how the interior is perceived at every step.
Rethinking the living room through light and texture
The living spaces rely on a careful mix of surfaces rather than decorative excess. Botanical wallpaper appears behind the seating area and in a nearby detail zone, where the pattern introduces movement without taking over the room. A dark accent wall, a textured rug and rounded seating pieces keep the composition grounded. In one view, the room is lit by several round pendant lights; in another, the same type of fixture appears as a single glass form. That repetition ties the interior together from one room to the next.
Dining and work zones with built-in storage
The dining room sits beside a wall of custom cabinetry, including open compartments, dark fronts and reflective inserts. A round pendant with multiple shades hangs over the table and gives the space a clear centre. Nearby, a work or library-like setting uses built-in bookshelves with a curved top edge, a pale tabletop and a darker base. The arrangement is compact but not closed in, because the shelving, table and overhead ring light leave room for daylight to cross the surface.
That same attention to built form appears in the entrance and stair area. A built-in cabinet with a mirror panel sits against botanical wallpaper, while the staircase uses wooden treads and a dark handrail beside glazed doors and timber wall cladding. These are small transitions, but they matter: they change the pace between rooms and give the home a steady rhythm of storage, reflection and movement. The interior design project feels assembled from these moments rather than from one dominant gesture.
Materials that repeat without feeling repetitive
Wood veneer, matte lacquer, stone-effect tile and natural stone surfaces return in different rooms, but each one plays a different role. The kitchen uses them for work and storage. The living room uses them for contrast against upholstery, wallpaper and shadowed wall panels. Even the pendant lighting shifts in character from room to room: a clustered fixture above the dining table, a glass globe in the lounge, a ring lamp in the study corner. This repetition gives the interior a clear visual language without flattening the spaces into copies of one another.
The colour range stays grounded in dark blue-grey, warm brown and cream, with lighter walls used to open the smaller moments between larger built-ins. In the images, the darker cabinetry absorbs light and the paler fronts reflect it, which keeps the rooms from feeling heavy. The botanical wallpaper adds a patterned layer in the living and entry zones, but it is the custom kitchen cabinets and their surrounding joinery that set the strongest line through the project. They connect storage, cooking and dining in one readable sequence.
Rounded lights, straight lines
Round pendant lighting is the recurring counterpoint to the sharper cabinet edges. In the kitchen bar images, the lamps hang over the seating area and mark the boundary between preparation and pause. In the dining room, a larger pendant with multiple shades spreads the focus more widely across the table. In the lounge, circular forms appear again as a glass pendant and as softer furniture shapes. These repeated curves stop the interiors from becoming too rigid, especially where the cabinetry and glazing create long, direct lines.
What stays with the viewer is the way the custom kitchen cabinets lead the eye through the home. They appear in tall storage walls, in low runs with narrow handles, in open shelving and in the library-like built-ins. Around them, the large windows with curtains, the natural stone countertops and the marble-look kitchen surfaces build a quiet variation of tone and texture. It is a home of clear edges, layered materials and careful transitions between cooking, dining, lounging and entry.
Photography: Space Content Studio
Want to see more of Stock Dutch Design? View the page of Stock Dutch Design for even more great projects and company information.








