OUR HOMES HAVE BECOME TOO POLITE;

Stop Building ‘Nice’ Homes & Start Building Authentic Ones 

The New Design Mandate: Authenticity Over ‘Picture Perfect’

If you’ve been scrolling through design feeds or reviewing client briefs, you know the atmosphere is shifting. According to the recent House Beautiful piece, “Our Homes Aren’t Weird Enough,” the era of “comfort neutrality” and “millennial gray” is officially ending, and we could not be more thrilled!

For too long, the default design (the one that aims to please everyone and offend no one) has dominated the market. We’ve been living in a world that feels mass produced. But designers and builders, are being called to push past the “visual routine that dulls the imagination” and create spaces that genuinely reflect the people who live there. Clients want the “messy mix of references” that constitutes true style.

The new home trend is not a capsule of design basics; it’s a commitment to maximalism, layering, and personality. It’s time to move beyond the generic and unUrth the unique perspective your clients deserve. This means every central element in the home, especially the kitchen, must deliver meaning and character.

Elegant kitchen featuring Product Name: 5 with cream cabinets, marble backsplash, and copper pots. A wooden island displays fresh vegetables and bread, with pendant lights above. Sunlight pours through a nearby window.

Raw Urth ‘Broadmoor’ Raven Black Patina with Burnished Brass Straps

The Anchor and The Spark for Maximalist Kitchen Design

In a room leaning heavily into layered textures, bold colors, and intricate patterns, the range hood is no longer just a functional necessity; it becomes the single most important pivot point in the design. It must either balance the exuberance or amplify the statement.

The three essential variables to consider for perfecting that maximalist space are shape, patina, and metal type. The more control over design, the higher the quality, and fluidity the space will have. This level of oversight allows you to unUrth something you can be proud of with every project.

The Importance of Precision in a Highly Layered Space

Maximalism is defined by its abundance, but that abundance needs structure. A custom metal hood allows you to control the exact balance of the room, acting as a deliberate counterpoint or a stunning complement.

Bright kitchen with high ceilings, large windows, modern lighting, Cabinet color wooden cabinets, red fridge, black accents, and a dining table with flowers. Natural light floods the space.

1. The Grounding Element: Weighing Down Overpowering Space

In a kitchen with a dramatic, brightly patterned tile backsplash and colorful cabinetry, the design can quickly feel chaotic. This is the moment to use the hood as an anchor; the strong, foundational element that helps the layered design feel intentional.

Action: Specify a large, clean, geometric shape. Hoods like the Box or the Braodmoor have been rapidly more popular with these recent trends. But don’t be fooled, they can be used to make a statement too! 

 

Finish: Pair it with a fine matte patina like Raven Black or Dark Antique. These finishes lay as a great background for more bright colors. Rustic Iron or Foundry are also great choices with a warmer color that incorporates tonally to more solid color pallets that want to be matched but don’t need anymore movement or strong texture.

 

Result: The hood’s weight and subdued finish provide a necessary moment of visual rest. It grounds the space with a palpable sense of enduring permanence, helping to unUrth the design’s inner structure.

Modern kitchen featuring Raw Urth Designs Steel Range Hood Boulder Agate dark textured tile backsplash, wood cabinets, a red fridge, stainless steel stove, animal figurines on open shelves, and a bowl of fruit on the counter.

Raw Urth ‘Boulder’ Range Hood with Agate Patina

Modern kitchen with white cabinets, gold hardware, gold range hood, and black marble counters. Glass pendant lights hang above the island with a gold faucet and a built-in sink. Product shown: 2.

2. The Amplification Element: Adding to the Bling

Conversely, some maximalist designs call for a bold splash of bling! A statement that adds to the layered luxury. Don’t be afraid to really choose what you love here. This is your space and your style. Make it count.

Action: Utilize more intricate designs, detailed strapping, pronounced rivets, “cake layers”, tool bars, or custom detailing. We find hoods like the Mesa, Montrose, and Wash Park are great to play with unlimited detailing options.

 

Finish: Opt for beautifully burnished metals like Polished Bronze or Burnished Brass, either as the base finish or great pops of detailing. These finishes catch the light, adding a brilliant, reflective layer to the room’s textures.

 

Result: The metal’s shine and the hood’s detail actively participate in the maximalist aesthetic, amplifying the room’s luxurious, personalized atmosphere. This is how you truly unUrth the room’s personality.

Modern kitchen featuring Product Name: 3, gold fixtures, white cabinets, a gold range hood, and a gold-and-glass chandelier above a large island.

Raw Urth ‘Box’ Range Hood in Burnished Brass

The Future of Customization: New Materials for New Trends Coming 2026

The demand for layering extends beyond metal. We understand that truly authentic spaces (those that embrace an eclectic mix of materials) require options that move beyond traditional metalwork.

Raw Urth is embracing this material-mixing trend by introducing custom hoods made from new materials like leather, stone, wood, and plaster coming to you in 2026. This expansion is designed to give you unparalleled freedom to layer natural textures and provide the multi-material aesthetic that maximalism demands. 

The fear of taking risks is what leads to “comfort neutrality.” As the market shifts toward the bold and the authentic, so are we! Contact us to unUrth something you can be proud of every single time.

Ready to start your own custom hood journey? Get in touch with our design team to bring your next kitchen project to life, one handcrafted detail at a time.