Dull, Peeling Kitchen Cabinets Got a Major Color Boost for $346

Sarah EverettHome Projects Editor
Sarah EverettHome Projects Editor
I organize the Before & After series and cover DIY and design. I joined AT in October 2020 as a production assistant. I have an MA in Journalism from the University of Missouri and a BA in Journalism from Belmont University. Past editorial stops include HGTV Magazine, Nashville Arts Magazine, and local magazines in my hometown, Columbia, Missouri.
published Aug 5, 2025
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About this before & after
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Rental Friendly

Apartment Therapy’s most-liked Before & After on Instagram last year was a beautiful craftsman-meets-boho kitchen. It has emerald green walls, caned cabinet doors, and striking stained glass windows, and it was designed by homeowners and designers Palmer Schallon and Melissa Arcaro (@psama_design). It is totally gorgeous, but isn’t totally renter-friendly because it involved replacing the countertops and appliances.

DIYer Tobias Gelbert’s (@herrgelbert) kitchen makeover bears a strong resemblance (hello, cane cabinet doors and jewel-toned green), but is a more renter-friendly version. 

“I wanted a brand-new kitchen, but that quickly shot up to nearly €20,000 — way too much, especially since it’s a rental apartment,” Tobias says. “So I came up with the idea to simply paint the cabinet fronts.” His kitchen makeover cost €300, or about $346 USD.

Bright green paint breathes life into the kitchen.

The kitchen cabinets didn’t necessarily look bad before, but they were about 20 years old and the white paint was chipping off. Overall, Tobias says the kitchen felt “old, dull, and a bit grimy” until “the idea to give it a fresh coat of paint came up.”

It was actually easy to remove the old cabinet paint with heat because it was peeling off anyway. (Tobias used a hair dryer, but you could also use a heat gun.)  

“The most important step, of course, was thoroughly cleaning the cabinet fronts at the very beginning,” he says. “I kept it super simple and left all the products and everything inside the kitchen cabinets — no need to empty them out.” 

His two paint colors for the cabinets are Miss Pompadour’s Green with Forest and Green with Ocean. “I chose truly stunning colors,” Tobias says. And they look great with the kitchen’s pre-existing mustard-colored walls.