Scandinavian Kitchen Before & After: AI Redesign Ideas (UK)
A Scandinavian kitchen before and after takes the kitchen you already have — often closed-in units, worn worktops and patchy under-cabinet lighting — and reimagines it with chalky white, pale grey and soft beige warmed by natural wood. Upload a photo of your existing kitchen to Remodelers UK and you can preview the full Scandinavian transformation in around 30 seconds, testing the look, the light oak, wool, linen and simple powder-coated metal and a new layout before you spend anything on materials or trades.
The Scandinavian kitchen transformation
The before is a kitchen built to cook, gather and host, but held back by closed-in units, worn worktops and patchy under-cabinet lighting. The Scandinavian redesign keeps the bones of the room and changes how it reads: bright, airy and unfussy, with a focus on natural light. Walls, surfaces and the cabinetry, worktops, splashback and island or run layout are re-styled together so the space feels intentional rather than piecemeal, and the result still looks like your home — just resolved.
In the after, the eye lands on a clear focal point and the clutter falls away. Expect pared-back furniture, soft textiles and plenty of negative space, so every surface earns its place and the kitchen feels calmer and more considered than the original.
Palette, materials and layout
The Scandinavian palette leans on chalky white, pale grey and soft beige warmed by natural wood. Colour is used with restraint, letting one or two tones carry the room while the rest stays quiet — an approach that photographs well and, more importantly, is easy to live with day to day.
Materials do the heavy lifting here: light oak, wool, linen and simple powder-coated metal. Mixing a few honest textures gives the kitchen depth without busyness, and it keeps the scheme feeling current rather than tied to a single passing trend.
On layout, the Scandinavian kitchen aims for an efficient working triangle, a generous island or run, and clear sightlines into the rest of the home. Even where the footprint cannot change, re-styling the cabinetry, worktops, splashback and island or run layout and re-thinking the lighting makes the room feel larger and more comfortable.
- Re-style the cabinetry, worktops, splashback and island or run layout as one considered Scandinavian scheme
- Lead with chalky white, pale grey and soft beige warmed by natural wood
- Layer in light oak, wool, linen and simple powder-coated metal
- Keep storage flush and surfaces clear to cook, gather and host
- Aim for an efficient working triangle, a generous island or run, and clear sightlines into the rest of the home
- Preview two or three variations before you commit
How the AI redesign works
To see it on your own kitchen, upload a single photo. Remodelers UK redesigns the space in over 50 styles in about 30 seconds, and virtual staging lets you drop in furniture so an empty or dated kitchen reads as finished. You can compare a Scandinavian scheme against other looks side by side, then take the version you like to your builder or designer as a clear brief.
Frequently asked questions
- What does a Scandinavian kitchen look like?
- A Scandinavian kitchen is built around bright, airy and unfussy, with a focus on natural light. The palette uses chalky white, pale grey and soft beige warmed by natural wood, the materials lean on light oak, wool, linen and simple powder-coated metal, and the finishing details bring in pared-back furniture, soft textiles and plenty of negative space.
- How do I get a Scandinavian before and after of my own kitchen?
- Upload a photo of your current kitchen to Remodelers UK, choose the Scandinavian style, and the AI returns a realistic before/after in about 30 seconds. You can try the same photo across 50+ styles and compare the results before deciding.
- Can I change the kitchen layout as well as the style?
- Yes. Alongside the Scandinavian finish you can use virtual staging to re-plan the cabinetry, worktops, splashback and island or run layout and preview different arrangements, so you can test an efficient working triangle, a generous island or run, and clear sightlines into the rest of the home before committing budget to building work.
Remodelers UK
Open app