Naked Kitchens' Jayne Everett – Looks, materials and ideas shaping designs in 2026
Naked Kitchens' Jayne Everett – Looks, materials and ideas shaping designs in 2026
Naked Kitchens’ head of design Jayne Everett shares why she believes 2026 will be the year of understated confidence in the realm of kitchen design.
Each year brings a new mood to kitchen design. In 2025, bold colour and texture had their moment in the spotlight. Now, things are calming down a touch – though not in a boring way. This is the year of confident restraint – kitchens that feel composed and characterful, the design equivalent of knowing exactly who you are and not needing to shout about it.
“People are feeling braver,” says Jayne, “but they’re also editing more carefully. They want individuality without clutter, richness without too much noise. It’s a kind of understated confidence.”
Here are 9 of the ideas inspiring the next wave of beautiful, made-for-life kitchens:
1 - The Rise of Taupe – and Other Warm Neutrals
White and grey are giving way to a warmer, richer family of neutrals. Taupes, mushrooms and stony greiges have become the new foundation tones.
“People are looking for warmer neutrals, especially taupes.” says Jayne. “We've introduced three new colours to our paints range – Holt Latte, Felbrigg Stone and Norfolk Dunes – which we think will be very popular in 2026. They work beautifully with timber and natural stone, and they let the craftsmanship speak. ” The result is kitchens that feel sophisticated but also homely and easy to live with: not too sterile or clinical.

2 - Earthy, Natural Colour Palettes
Alongside taupes, there’s growing appetite for colours inspired by nature: clay, moss, stone, sand dunes, samphire and terracotta.
“These shades feel timeless,” Jayne explains. “They connect the kitchen to the landscape and to the materials it’s made from.” Expect these gentle earthy hues to anchor many 2026 kitchens, often paired with natural oak or walnut for balance.
3 - Tone-on-Tone Colour
A subtler evolution of the two-tone trend is taking hold: using two shades of the same colour to create depth and interest. It’s a trick designers love because it makes a room look effortlessly sophisticated – even if you’ve just matched two paint charts on instinct.
“In one recent project we used two greens that were very close in tone,” says Jayne. “You almost don’t notice at first, but it adds a real richness.”

4 - Exposed Timbers – and the Return of Natural Walnut
Exposed timber finishes are likely to be big in 2026, and natural walnut in particular continues to rise. Not the heavily stained, dark finishes of old, but lighter lacquers that reveal the movement of the grain.
“People are drawn to the honesty of it,” says Jayne. “The variation in colour, the sense of warmth. It gives a kitchen depth and longevity.” Expect to see walnut paired with creamy neutrals or stone for a modern, elegant look.

5 - Statement Stone and Sculptural Surfaces
Worktops are thicker, bolder and more expressive. Marbles, quartz and granites with generous veining and honed finishes are popular, often wrapping seamlessly up the walls.
Jayne notes: “When the same stone runs from the surface to the splashback, it almost feels carved from one block. It’s a great way to bring a bit of art into something very practical.”

6 - Display and Delight
Open shelving, glazed cupboards and glass-fronted larders continue to evolve. Instead of hiding everything away, people are choosing to display the things that make their kitchen personal.
“It’s lovely when people curate their space,” says Jayne. “You see collections of ceramics, cookbooks, glassware, all these little glimpses of life.” The key is to design for display from the start.
7 - Breaking up the Block
A newer shift Jayne is noticing is a move away from monolithic banks of tall cabinetry.
“People are realising that if you mix materials or finishes – maybe glazed panels on the top cupboards, or timber doors above painted ones – it adds a sense of visual ‘rhythm’ and a lightness,” she explains. The effect is less ‘boxy’ – and it’s the difference between a kitchen that looks designed and one that feels like it’s grown naturally over time.

8 - Crafty Home Bars and Cocktail Cabinets
The love affair with in-kitchen bars is just growing. From mirrored cocktail cabinets to discreet coffee or drinks stations, these little moments of luxury are becoming everyday essentials.
“People love that feeling of discovery,” says Jayne. “It’s the thing everyone wants to open when they visit.” Whether it’s a pocket-door bar tucked into a pantry or a bold statement cabinet in brass and walnut, a well-designed bar adds a sense of theatre – and proves that practicality and pleasure can happily share the same space.

9 - Extending the Kitchen to other Beauifully Useful Rooms
Utility and boot rooms are often connected or adjacent to the kitchen, and increasingly they’re designed with the same care and materials – and at the same time, rather than being an afterthought. Designing them at the same time as the kitchen can create a harmonious feeling and a flow through the home.
“People want these spaces to feel connected,” says Jayne. “They might use a simpler handle, say, but it’s all still in the same tone. After all, if you spend half your life doing laundry, it might as well be somewhere lovely.”

If 2025 was about bold expression, 2026 is about a composed kind of confidence – kitchens that feel personal and effortless, and deeply satisfying to live with.
Timeless materials and thoughtful details make these spaces subtly brilliant rather than loudly fashionable. They’re the kind of kitchens that just get better the longer you live with them.
Tags: insight, features, naked kitchens, jayne everett, 2026 kitchen trends